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Emergency

An emergency is a situation that poses an immediate risk to health, life, property, or the environment and requires urgent action to prevent a worse outcome. The term is used across medicine, law enforcement, and disaster management. While emergencies and disasters are related, an emergency may be localized and manageable with available resources, whereas a disaster overwhelms local capacity and requires external assistance.

Common categories include medical emergencies (heart attack, stroke), accidental injuries (vehicle crashes), natural hazards (earthquakes, floods),

The first objective of an emergency response is life protection. This typically involves summoning emergency services,

Warning and preparedness play central roles. Early warning systems, alarms, and public alerts inform communities, while

Effective emergency systems require coordination among government agencies, responders, healthcare providers, businesses, and communities, along with

and
industrial
incidents
(chemical
spills).
The
specifics
and
severity
determine
the
appropriate
response.
providing
immediate
care
or
triage
on
the
scene,
and
taking
steps
to
remove
people
from
danger.
Emergency
medical
services,
fire
departments,
and
police
coordinate
to
stabilize
victims,
control
hazards,
and
facilitate
evacuation
when
needed.
In
mass-casualty
events,
triage
orders
treatment
by
severity
and
likelihood
of
survival.
drills,
training,
and
pre-arranged
plans
improve
readiness.
Emergency
management
follows
a
cycle
of
mitigation,
preparedness,
response,
and
recovery
to
reduce
future
impacts.
clear
communication,
adequate
resources,
and
responder
safety
considerations.