In incident command, the person who works with area medical examiners, coroners, and law enforcement agencies to coordinate the disposition of the dead victims.
An agreement between neighboring EMS systems to respond to mass-casualty incidents or disasters in each other's region when local resources are insufficient to handle the response.
Portable, compressed gas containers used to hold liquids and gases such as nitrogen, argon, helium, and oxygen. They have a range of sizes and internal pressures.
The overall leader of the incident command system to whom commanders or leaders of incident command system divisions report.
In incident command, the position that helps procure and stockpile equipment and supplies during an incident.
Any container other than bulk storage containers, such as drums, bags, compressed gas cylinders, and cryogenic containers. These hold commonly used commercial and industrial chemicals such as solvents, industrial cleaners, and compounds.
Shipping and storage vessels that can be either pressurized or non-pressurized.
A Department of Homeland Security system designed to enable federal, state, and local governments and private-sector and nongovernmental organizations to effectively and efficiently prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from domestic incidents, regardless of cause, size, or complexity including acts of catastrophic terrorism.
In incident command, the person who relays information, concerns, and requests among responding agencies.
An incident that is not yet contained; there may be patients to be located and the situation may be ongoing, producing more patients.
An area designated by the incident commander, or a designee, in which public information officers from multiple agencies distribute information about the incident.
A type of patient sorting used to rapidly categorize patients; the focus is on speed in locating all patients and determining an initial priority as their conditions warrant.
In incident command, the person appointed to determine the type of equipment and resources needed for a situation involving extrication or special rescue; also called the extrication officer.