Supply-demand mismatch causes substantial deterioration in prehospital emergency medical service under disasters

Abstract Floods severely disrupt prehospital emergency medical services (EMS), which dispatch medical personnel to deliver on-scene treatment, by hindering ambulance mobility and increasing medical demand. Here, we proposes a simulation-based framework that integrates flood inundation, EMS facility...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Weiyi Chen, Hui Qian, Limao Zhang, Yue Pan, Zongao Li, Paolo Gardoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-08-01
Series:Communications Engineering
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s44172-025-00481-8
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Summary:Abstract Floods severely disrupt prehospital emergency medical services (EMS), which dispatch medical personnel to deliver on-scene treatment, by hindering ambulance mobility and increasing medical demand. Here, we proposes a simulation-based framework that integrates flood inundation, EMS facility data, and population-weighted medical demand to assess regional EMS performance under different flood scenarios. Applied to Zhengzhou, China, the framework evaluates system responses during normal conditions, 1-in-50-year, 1-in-100-year floods, and the extreme “7.20” rainfall disaster. Results show dramatic increases in response times during “7.20”, with resource shortages identified as a key delay factor. Three mitigation strategies are evaluated: adding ambulances, inter-subcenter ambulance sharing, and a hybrid approach. The results demonstrate that ambulance sharing outperforms limited ambulance additions, increasing 10-min and 30-min population coverage by 15.2% and 22.7%, respectively, while the hybrid approach achieves optimal improvement. The findings offer policy guidance for improving EMS resilience in flood-prone regions and support global urban disaster preparedness.
ISSN:2731-3395