Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection

Earthquakes and tsunamis are expected to occur within the next 30 years along Japan's Nankai Trough. Existing disaster prevention plans and calculated evacuation capacities in the coastal areas that would be affected do not account for physical distancing in the context of COVID-19. Therefore,...

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Main Authors: Hisao Nakai, Tomoya Itatani, Ryo Horiike
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-10-01
Series:Progress in Disaster Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061721000430
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spelling doaj-4ede0c73743b4add94a10d8c8f318d8d2021-09-05T04:41:44ZengElsevierProgress in Disaster Science2590-06172021-10-0111100183Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infectionHisao Nakai0Tomoya Itatani1Ryo Horiike2School of Nursing, Kanazawa Medical University, Ishikawa, Japan; Corresponding author at: School of Nursing, Kanazawa Medical University, 1-1 Daigaku, Uchinada, Kahoku, Ishikawa 920-0965, Japan.School of Health Sciences, College of Medical, Pharmaceutical and Health Sciences, Kanazawa University, Ishikawa, JapanSusaki Regional Welfare and Health Center, Kochi, JapanEarthquakes and tsunamis are expected to occur within the next 30 years along Japan's Nankai Trough. Existing disaster prevention plans and calculated evacuation capacities in the coastal areas that would be affected do not account for physical distancing in the context of COVID-19. Therefore, we developed a tsunami evacuation placement model incorporating physical distance guidelines for infection control and living space per person into calculations of evacuation center accommodation capacities in Aki City, Kochi Prefecture. Using available administrative, population, and tsunami inundation data, we counted and mapped evacuation centers in the estimated inundated area within three zones constructed for smooth evacuation using the ArcGIS software Build Balanced Zones Tool. We calculated the space per evacuee using the Sphere handbook standard of 3.5 m2 or double the Sphere standard at 7 m2 plus the recommended physical distance of 11 m2 per person. We then compared the results with planned capacities. A total of 27 shelters are located in the area projected to be inundated at depths of 0.3–10 m, and their planned capacity, 2 m2 for each evacuee, would accommodate 32.9% of Aki's population and result in 9639 unaccommodated evacuees. Allotting 14.5 m2 (living space) or 18 m2 (living space plus space to maintain physical distancing) would reduce accommodation capacities to 57.1% and 28.6% (12,133 and 12,371 unaccommodated evacuees, respectively). Given these accommodation shortages, we recommend that evacuation centers are set aside for vulnerable people and that alternative evacuation sites such as parking lots and mountain campsites are preplanned.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061721000430COVID-19Social distanceTsunami evacuationEvacuee placement model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hisao Nakai
Tomoya Itatani
Ryo Horiike
spellingShingle Hisao Nakai
Tomoya Itatani
Ryo Horiike
Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
Progress in Disaster Science
COVID-19
Social distance
Tsunami evacuation
Evacuee placement model
author_facet Hisao Nakai
Tomoya Itatani
Ryo Horiike
author_sort Hisao Nakai
title Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
title_short Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
title_full Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
title_fullStr Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
title_full_unstemmed Construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent COVID-19 infection
title_sort construction of an evacuee placement model for tsunami shelters considering physical distancing to prevent covid-19 infection
publisher Elsevier
series Progress in Disaster Science
issn 2590-0617
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Earthquakes and tsunamis are expected to occur within the next 30 years along Japan's Nankai Trough. Existing disaster prevention plans and calculated evacuation capacities in the coastal areas that would be affected do not account for physical distancing in the context of COVID-19. Therefore, we developed a tsunami evacuation placement model incorporating physical distance guidelines for infection control and living space per person into calculations of evacuation center accommodation capacities in Aki City, Kochi Prefecture. Using available administrative, population, and tsunami inundation data, we counted and mapped evacuation centers in the estimated inundated area within three zones constructed for smooth evacuation using the ArcGIS software Build Balanced Zones Tool. We calculated the space per evacuee using the Sphere handbook standard of 3.5 m2 or double the Sphere standard at 7 m2 plus the recommended physical distance of 11 m2 per person. We then compared the results with planned capacities. A total of 27 shelters are located in the area projected to be inundated at depths of 0.3–10 m, and their planned capacity, 2 m2 for each evacuee, would accommodate 32.9% of Aki's population and result in 9639 unaccommodated evacuees. Allotting 14.5 m2 (living space) or 18 m2 (living space plus space to maintain physical distancing) would reduce accommodation capacities to 57.1% and 28.6% (12,133 and 12,371 unaccommodated evacuees, respectively). Given these accommodation shortages, we recommend that evacuation centers are set aside for vulnerable people and that alternative evacuation sites such as parking lots and mountain campsites are preplanned.
topic COVID-19
Social distance
Tsunami evacuation
Evacuee placement model
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590061721000430
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