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Public Health Rep ; 129 Suppl 4: 154-65, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25355987

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study explored if and to what extent the laws of U.S. states mirrored the U.S. federal laws for responding to nuclear-radiological emergencies (NREs). METHODS: Emergency laws from a 12-state sample and the federal government were retrieved and translated into numeric codes representing acting agents, their partner agents, and the purposes of activity in terms of preparedness, response, and recovery. We used network analysis to explore the relationships among agents in terms of legally directed NRE activities. RESULTS: States' legal networks for NREs appear as not highly inclusive, involving an average of 28% of agents among those specified in the federal laws. Certain agents are highly central in NRE networks, so that their capacity and effectiveness might strongly influence an NRE response. CONCLUSIONS: State-level lawmakers and planners might consider whether or not greater inclusion of agents, modeled on the federal government laws, would enhance their NRE laws and if more agents should be engaged in planning and policy-making for NRE incidents. Further research should explore if and to what extent legislated NRE directives impose constraints on practical response activities including emergency planning.


Subject(s)
Disaster Planning/organization & administration , Nuclear Warfare , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Radioactive Hazard Release , State Government , Civil Defense/organization & administration , Humans , Radiation Monitoring , Radiation Protection , United States
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