Radiation Medicine After Blast: Clinical Care and Public Health Response
MTA
Practical medical knowledge for clinicians and planners treating radiation injuries at scale
2nd Edition
*Radiation Medicine After Blast: Clinical Care and Public Health Response* is a comprehensive guide designed for clinicians and emergency planners tasked with managing the complex medical and systemic challenges following a nuclear or radiological event. The book bridges the gap between the underlying science of ionizing radiation and the practical operational requirements of a mass-casualty response. It begins with the fundamentals of radiation biology and injury patterns, emphasizing the "triple threat" of blast trauma, thermal burns, and radiation exposure. Central to the text is the clinical management of Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS) and localized radiation injuries, providing detailed protocols for dose estimation, hematologic support, and the management of gastrointestinal and neurovascular complications.
The book transitions from individual bedside care to large-scale public health operations, outlining the integration of the Incident Command System (ICS) in managing hospital surges and community-level interventions. Critical chapters detail the logistics of mass-casualty triage, the establishment of decontamination corridors, and the strategic deployment of medical countermeasures such as potassium iodide, Prussian Blue, and hematopoietic growth factors. The text highlights the synergistic lethality of "combined injuries," where trauma or burns exacerbate radiation-induced immune suppression, necessitating specialized surgical decision-making and resource prioritization under severe constraints.
Beyond acute clinical interventions, the volume addresses the long-term responsibilities of the public health system. This includes the establishment of population registries and health surveillance programs to monitor for late-onset effects such as cancer, cataracts, and infertility. Special attention is given to vulnerable populations, including pediatrics, pregnant individuals, and older adults with chronic conditions, whose unique physiological and psychological needs require tailored medical approaches. The book also emphasizes the environmental health aspect of recovery, providing guidance on securing food and water supplies and ensuring the safety of shelters from persistent fallout.
The final section of the book focuses on the human and ethical dimensions of disaster response. It provides a robust framework for navigating "crisis standards of care," where clinicians must shift from individual-centered ethics to population-based utility to maximize survival. Extensive coverage is given to behavioral health, staff resilience, and the mitigation of moral distress among responders. The book concludes by stressing the necessity of continuous improvement through rigorous training, inter-agency exercises, and the formalization of "lessons learned" into institutional memory, ensuring that healthcare systems remain resilient in the face of unprecedented radiological threats.
This book is designed for clinicians (physicians, nurses, EMTs), health system leaders (hospital administrators, public health officials), and emergency planners who must respond to radiological or nuclear events that overwhelm normal medical capacity. It provides operational guidance for those working at the bedside, in emergency operations centers, and across communities facing constrained conditions during sustained radiation incidents.
January 23, 2026
65,184 words
4 hours 34 minutes
Click to order this paperback:
Buy NowPrint copy is made to order and ships worldwide. Includes the ebook free, ready to read instantly.
$5 account credit for all new MixCache.com accounts!