처음 72시간: 응급 대응 타임라인
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The first 72 hours after an earthquake determine survival outcomes. Learn the emergency response timeline from initial shaking to organized relief.
Why the First 72 Hours Define Earthquake Disasters
Emergency management professionals widely agree that the first 72 hours after a major earthquake are the most consequential for saving lives. During this window, trapped survivors can still be reached, fires can be contained before spreading, and critical medical interventions can prevent deaths from treatable injuries. The actions of individuals, communities, and governments during this compressed timeline determine a substantial fraction of the final death toll. Understanding the sequence of events that unfolds during this period helps both responders and ordinary citizens prepare to act effectively.
Hour Zero: Immediate Aftermath
In the seconds after shaking stops, the immediate priority for anyone affected is personal safety assessment. The Drop, Cover, and Hold OnThe internationally recommended protective action during earthquake shaking. Drop to your hands and knees, take cover under sturdy furniture, and hold on until shaking stops. posture that most people know from drills transitions to a post-shaking assessment: checking for injuries, evaluating structural integrity of the immediate environment, and determining whether it is safer to remain inside or evacuate. Aftershocks will follow — sometimes within seconds — making hasty outdoor movement dangerous if glass, cladding, or masonry is still falling from buildings.
The first calls to emergency services begin within minutes, quickly overwhelming 911 and equivalent systems. Cell tower damage, power outages, and network congestion all reduce communication capacity precisely when demand spikes. Text messages are often more reliable than voice calls during this period because they require less sustained bandwidth.
Hours 1 to 6: Surface Rescue
Local fire departments and police initiate response within the first hour. The focus at this stage is surface rescue — extracting survivors who are visible, partially exposed, or accessible without specialized equipment. Community members themselves account for a significant proportion of these early rescues; neighbors helping neighbors in the chaotic first hour often save as many lives as professional responders.
[[Emergency-kit]] contents become critical during this phase. People with first aid supplies can treat bleeding wounds and stabilize fractures. Those with flashlights can search darkened collapsed spaces. Battery-powered radios provide information when cell networks are down. Individuals who have prepared Earthquake Emergency KitA pre-assembled collection of supplies for surviving the aftermath of an earthquake, typically including water (1 gallon/person/day for 3 days), food, first aid, flashlight, and radio. supplies before a disaster are better able to help themselves and those around them in this critical window.
The Role of CERT (Community Emergency Response Team)A volunteer program that trains community members in basic disaster response skills including fire suppression, search and rescue, and medical triage for the initial post-earthquake period. Teams
CERT (Community Emergency Response Team)A volunteer program that trains community members in basic disaster response skills including fire suppression, search and rescue, and medical triage for the initial post-earthquake period. — Community Emergency Response Teams — are organized groups of trained volunteers who supplement professional emergency services in exactly this early phase. CERT members have received basic training in disaster triage, light search and rescue, fire suppression, and emergency medical operations. When professional responders are overwhelmed by a major event, CERT members fill crucial gaps by triaging survivors at neighborhood assembly points, conducting organized searches of intact structures, and providing first aid at collection points.
CERT teams are most effective when they focus on their trained scope and avoid freelancing in technical rescue scenarios beyond their capability. A CERT member who enters an unstable structure without proper training can become a victim rather than a rescuer, diverting resources from the original rescue.
Hours 6 to 24: Organized Response Escalation
By the six-hour mark in a major disaster, regional and national response resources are typically activating. Regional Urban Search and Rescue teams travel to the affected area. Emergency operations centers open at local, regional, and national levels. Mutual aid agreements between neighboring jurisdictions activate resource sharing.
Search and Rescue (SAR)Organized efforts to locate and extract survivors trapped in collapsed structures after an earthquake. The first 72 hours are the critical window for finding survivors alive. operations intensify as professional teams systematically survey collapse sites. A critical task during this phase is establishing a unified command structure to coordinate the growing number of responding agencies. Without effective coordination, teams can duplicate effort at some sites while other sites with trapped survivors receive no attention.
Hospitals assess their own structural integrity and begin implementing mass casualty protocols. The bloodbank system activates. Field medical stations establish at staging areas near the disaster zone to treat survivors before hospital transport.
Hours 24 to 48: International and Specialized Resources Arrive
For major disasters, international assistance typically arrives in the 24 to 48-hour window. INSARAG-classified international USAR teams can be wheels-up within six hours of a formal request and on the ground within 24 to 32 hours for most global destinations. These teams bring heavy rescue equipment, medical specialists, search technology, and logistical self-sufficiency that supplements overwhelmed local systems.
Aerial surveys during this phase provide comprehensive damage mapping. Satellite imagery, drones, and manned reconnaissance flights feed data to damage assessment teams who produce preliminary loss estimates. These estimates guide the allocation of international humanitarian aid resources.
Water and food distribution to displaced survivors becomes critical. Emergency shelter — initially tarps and tents — begins deployment for those whose homes are uninhabitable. People with medical conditions requiring medication that was lost in the disaster need connection with pharmaceutical supply chains.
Hours 48 to 72: Transition and Sustained Operations
By 48 hours, the nature of operations shifts. The probability of finding live survivors in building collapses drops significantly, though rescue teams continue working with dedication. The humanitarian relief system — food, water, shelter, medical care — is increasingly the primary focus. Temporary communities form in parks, open spaces, and emergency shelter facilities.
Debris removal begins on a systematic basis, with particular attention to clearing transport routes so that heavier equipment and supply trucks can access affected areas. Power restoration teams begin assessing the grid. Water system engineers assess pipe damage and implement emergency repairs or distribution workarounds.
Psychosocial support becomes increasingly important. Survivors who have spent two to three days in shock, without adequate sleep, food, or information about missing family members, are under extreme stress. Mental health first aid — provided by trained volunteers and professionals alike — helps prevent acute stress from developing into longer-term trauma disorders.
Information Management During the 72-Hour Window
One of the most challenging operational problems during major earthquake response is information management. Thousands of reports, requests, resource movements, and status updates must be tracked simultaneously. Modern emergency management systems use digital platforms to maintain common operating pictures — shared maps showing resource deployment, confirmed rescue sites, hospital capacity, and infrastructure status. When these systems fail or are overwhelmed, effective response degrades rapidly.
Social media simultaneously helps and hinders information management. Platforms like Twitter and Facebook have been used effectively to coordinate grassroots rescue efforts and locate missing persons. They also spread misinformation that can divert responders to non-existent emergencies or cause panic about hazards that do not exist. The Did You Feel It? (DYFI)A USGS program that collects intensity reports from the public after earthquakes to create community-derived intensity maps. Allows anyone who felt an earthquake to submit a report. system operated by USGS (United States Geological Survey)The primary US government agency responsible for monitoring earthquakes, operating the National Earthquake Information Center, and publishing real-time earthquake data worldwide. provides a structured channel for public reports that contributes to professional damage assessment while filtering noise.
Self-Sufficiency as the Foundation
Emergency management authorities consistently advise that communities and households should be prepared to be self-sufficient for at least 72 hours after a major earthquake — and preferably longer. Professional help will come, but it cannot reach every person simultaneously in the immediate aftermath of a catastrophic event. The household or neighborhood that has water, food, first aid supplies, and basic tools is far better positioned to survive the critical first 72 hours than one that immediately requires external assistance.
This is not a counsel of pessimism but of realism: the probability that a prepared community survives the 72-hour window with minimal casualties is substantially higher than for an unprepared one. Every family that can care for itself is one fewer demand on a system that will be stretched to its limits.