Mining Publication: Issues for Training an Evolving Emergency Management Workforce: A View from the U.S. Mining Community
Original creation date: May 2002
This paper reviews research from the U.S. mining community to define issues relevant to an evolving national and international workforce and to relate them to the emergency response population. The authors further explore and relate the key problem of an aging workforce to the resultant changes and emerging physical and psychological needs of emergency workers. Finally, the authors cite examples from the mine emergency response community and mine rescue experiences to suggest practical recommendations that include both organizational and individual formats, with an emphasis on new approaches to training this changing workforce.
Authors: KM Kowalski, C Vaught, LG Mallett, MJ Brnich
Conference Paper - May 2002
NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20023443
Int Emerg Mgmt Soc 9th Ann Conf Proc, May 14-17, 2002, R. T. Newkirk, ed., University of Waterloo, Canada, 2002 May; :430-438
See Also
- Age Awareness Training for Miners
- The Emergency Communication Triangle
- Knowledge Management and Transfer for Mine Emergency Response
- Make it Safer with Roof Screen
- Mine Rescue Training Facility Inventory - Compendium of Ideas to Improve US Coal Mine Rescue Training
- Mine Safety Education and Training Seminar: Proceedings: Bureau of Mines Technology Transfer Seminar
- Probability of Making a Successful Mine Escape While Wearing a Self-Contained Self-Rescuer
- Technology News 497 - "You Are My Sunshine": A New Video Release From NIOSH on the Sunshine Mine Fire
- Technology News 507 - NIOSH Safety Talk: The Emergency Communication Triangle
- Technology News 535 - NIOSH Releases New Educational Video: Escape from Farmington No. 9: An Oral History
- Page last reviewed: 9/21/2012
- Page last updated: 9/21/2012
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program