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The primary aim of this textbook is to contribute towards the promotion of human security by educating nurses with a profound understanding of disaster nursing and to conduct innovative research and practices in cooperation. This textbook emphasizes on multi-professional connections; offers knowledge on how Japanese disaster nursing got evolved in changing social contexts and provides various case studies that reflect wonderful practices in the disaster nursing field which have contributed to the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, the UN Sustainable Development Goals, and sustainable human security. 





Frequent disasters have triggered the need for more trans-disciplinary work, high-level care throughout all phases of a disaster event, and the need for nursing leaders. Apart from hospitals, in local communities, nurses can take a role to mitigate health risks. Being a member of every part of the healthcare system, they can become critically needed leaders in emergency management and disaster preparedness. 

This work includes a DRR Framework and the application to disaster nursing, information on preparedness and community resilience and on the related disciplines and coordination with disaster nursing. It informs on the challenges in disaster nursing, offers instructional design, education development and research in disaster nursing.









Students, professional nurses, clinicians, community health practitioners, health volunteers, disaster support organizations, researchers, and community partners who are involved in the care of disaster survivors can use this resource. Written by distinguished experts with diverse backgrounds of nursing, public health, health informatics, and geography, this book shows how practitioners, researchers, policymakers, and multiple community stakeholders who can collaborate effectively and efficiently to restore primary health care of survivors after a local disaster.
Part I Global Health and Care for Disaster Risk Reduction
1 Disaster Nursing Innovation for Sustainable Community
3(10)
Sakiko Kanbara
Hiroko Minami
2 Global Requirement to Disaster Nursing
13(8)
Rajib Shaw
Sakiko Kanbara
3 Challenges of Global Health with Nursing
21(10)
Sakiko Kanbara
Sayumi Nojima
4 Care for Disaster Risk Reduction
31(12)
Sakiko Kanbara
Archana Shrestha Joshi
Shoko Miyagawa
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Part II Contribution of Nursing Care for Disaster Risk Reduction
5 Disaster Health in Shelters in Japan
43(12)
Mayumi Kako
Alison Hutton
Sakiko Kanbara
6 Research of Disaster Nursing in Japan 2005-2020
55(10)
Maki Nakajima
Sakiko Kanbara
7 Nursing Experience on Disaster and Health Emergencies
65(12)
Sonoe Mashino
Sheila Bonito
Yudi Ariesta Chandra
Kaori Matsuo
Qin Hu
Ye Tao
Eni Nuraini Agustini
Sushila Paudel
Sakiko Kanbara
8 The Sendai Framework and the Bangkok Principles for Nurses
77(10)
Hanae Miura
Sakiko Kanbara
9 History of the Development of Competencies for Disaster Nursing
87(12)
Sakiko Kanbara
Aiko Yamamoto
10 Capacity Development and the Instructional Design for Achievement Goal
99(12)
Miyuki Horiuchi
Takujiro Ito
11 Nursing Research on Disaster
111(12)
Sakiko Kanbara
Yoko Nakayama
Part III Fostering Care in Sustainable Community
12 Needs of Cultivating Seamless and Individual Care
123(10)
Megumi Fujii
Marina Inagaki
Kengo Kobayashi
Shigeru Miyamae
Akihisa Sakai
Kosuke Sasaki
Sakiko Kanbara
13 Primary Health Care (PHC), Universal Health Coverage (UHC), Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR), and Role of Local Caregiver
133(14)
Hastoro Dwinantoaji
Hasti Widyasamratri
Sushila Paudel
Yuko Fushimi
Ikuko Moriguchi
Sakiko Kanbara
14 Key Players of Cross-Sectoral Collaboration in DRR
147(14)
Shoko Miyagawa
Tetsuya Myojo
Yasuhiro Ueshima
Archana Shrestha Joshi
15 Roles, Rules, and Tools for National Humanitarian Networks on H-EDRM
161(12)
Yasuhiro Ishimine
16 Community Resilience, Disaster Nursing, and the UN Sustainable Development Goal
173(12)
Odeya Cohen
Judith Shamian
Sakiko Kanbara
17 Caring Ecosystems for Area-Capability
185(8)
Satoshi Ishikawa
18 Big Challenge for SDGs: Case Study--COVID-19
193(16)
Archana Shrestha Joshi
Hu Qin
Rini Damayanti
Shigeru Miyamae
Kengo Kobayashi
Parvati Bista
Sakiko Kanbara
Part IV Assessing Care for Disaster Risk Reduction
19 Quantitative Approach for Assessment Health in Disaster
209(10)
Tomohiro Matsuda
Sakiko Kanbara
20 Qualitative Approaches to Investigating Health in Disaster: Cases from Nepal and Japan
219(8)
Hyeon Ju Lee
Miho Murata
21 Chronological Approach for Disaster Response and Monitoring
227(16)
Muneyoshi Numada
Tomoyuki Sowa
Sakiko Kanbara
22 Introduction to EpiNurse: Emerging Care, Communication, and Health Monitoring in Nepal
243(20)
Apsara Pandey
Tara Pokharel
Chandrakala Sharma
Archana Shrestha Joshi
Sakiko Kanbara
Part V Decision Making for People-Centered H-EDRM
23 Risk-Based Approach for VUCA World
263(10)
Shoko Miyagawa
Sachiko Ohta
24 Personal Life Records (PLR) for Health Decision-Making in Disaster Situations
273(12)
Sachiko Ohta
Tadashi Okamoto
Naonori Kato
Sakiko Kanbara
25 Management of Health- and Disaster-Related Data
285(12)
Maria Regina Estuar
Shoko Miyagawa
Christian Pulmano
John Noel Victorino
Sachiko Ohta
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Sakiko Kanbara
26 Geographic Information System (GIS) and Data Visualization
297(12)
Hiranya Sritart
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
27 Designing Data for DRR (Disaster Risk Reduction) Services
309(8)
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Shoko Miyagawa
28 Case Studies of ICT/GIS Application for DRR
317(12)
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Shoko Miyagawa
Archana Shrestha Joshi
Sakiko Kanbara
Part VI Way to Forward: Challenges Global Primary Health Care with Local Nursing
29 Locality and Caring in Uncertainty
329(8)
Sakiko Kanbara
Noriko Katada
30 Care for Disaster Risk Reduction and Communication: Lessons Learned and Way to Forward
337
Sakiko Kanbara
Shoko Miyagawa
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Correction to: Geographic Information System(GIS) and Data Visualization 1
Hiranya Sritart
Hiroyuki Miyazaki
Sakiko Kanbara; Founder of EpiNurse Incorporated, which won the Risk Award the 2017 Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, and professor at University of Kochi, mandated as a board member of the Japan Society of Disaster Nursing, member of Science Council of Japan. She received her BS and MS in Health Science from Kobe University and her Ph.D. from the Department of Public Health and International Health, Okayama University.





She earned her place as a researcher at the Research Institute of Nursing Care for People and Community, WHO Collaboration Center for Nursing in Disasters and Health Emergency, University of Hyogo. She has developed new courses for Doctoral Degree Course for Disaster Nursing Global Leadership Program at the University of Kochi, Japan since 2012.





Research interests include disaster nursing, primary healthcare, and health informatics. She received a Special Innovation Award from the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, Harvard Kennedy School as a designer of Participatory Caring Map After Flooding in West Japan 2018.





 





Shoko Miyagawa received her B.A. in Economics and Master of Business Administration and Accounting from Hitotsubashi University and Ph.D. in Media and Governance from Keio University. She also received her Master of Science in Health Informatics from School of Biomedical Informatics, The University of Texas in 2013. Since 2006 she has been an Associate Professor in Faculty of Nursing and Medical Care, Keio University. Her research interest includes health informatics and disaster informatics. She drives the FabNurse Project, a research project to develop and deliver 3D printed care tools. She is the representative of IT DART, a disaster response team of IT professionals and provides various kind of IT support in the event of disaster.

 





Hiroyuki Miyazaki received a B.A. in environmental information from Keio University, Kanagawa, Japan, in 2006, and M.E.S. and Ph.D. degrees in environmental studies from The University of Tokyo, Japan, in 2008 and 2011, respectively. From 2011 to 2012, he was a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow with the Center for Spatial Information Science, The University of Tokyo. Since 2012, he had been a researcher with the Earth Observation Data Integration and Fusion Research Initiative, The University of Tokyo, as well as a secondee at the Asian Development Bank, Philippines. Since 2016, he has been the Project Assistant Professor with the Center for Spatial Information Science, The University of Tokyo, and was seconded to the Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand. Since August 2020, he was appointed as a technical advisor in GLODAL, Inc. and since June 2021 as the President to serve for R&D and human resource development in space utilization, AI, and IoT. His research interests include geospatial information science, satellite remote sensing for socioeconomics, and applications to sustainable development.