The 1980 Earthquake in Southern Italy— Morbidity and Mortality

Abstract
De Bruycker M (Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, WHO Collaborating Centre, School of Public Health, Catholic University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium), Greco D and Lechat M F. The 1980 earthquake in Italy: morbidity and mortality. International Journal of Epidemiology 1985, 14: 113–117. The effects on health of the 1980 earthquake in southern Italy were surveyed retrospectively. The sample population includes 3619 people living in seven villages situated near the epicentre. Deaths were one hundred times and injury rates more than five times higher in trapped than in non-trapped victims. The possibility for escape was crucial for survival and depended on the type of building. Most of the rescue and relief work was carried out within a few days by unprepared local people who concentrated assistance on people sharing the same dwelling. The results suggest that the emergency phase for medical care was limited to the three to four days after impact. During the 18 months following the quake, mortality rates in injured (13.7%) and non-injured victims (15.8%) were similar. These results point to the need to establish, in each disaster prone area, a health evaluation system on which effective disaster relief and especially the preparedness of the community can be based.