PREREQUISITE
- Disaster Doctor
- David McCann prepares physicians to respond when tragedy strikes
By Rebecca
Pollard Pierik

- A native of New England, David McCann ’09G has always gone where patients needed him most. After completing medical school in Canada in 1989, he relocated to rural southern Georgia upon learning that a physician shortage was claiming lives throughout the Deep South.
On the morning of September 11, 2001, after hearing that the Twin
Towers had fallen, Dr.
David McCann ’09G bought a train ticket
in Georgia and headed for Manhattan. The family practitioner and
emergency-room physician treated rescue workers and firefighters
in an armory near Ground Zero in the days after the attack. Seeing
New Yorkers “brought instantaneously to their knees” made him determined
to improve the way our nation responds to emergencies, says McCann.
Since then, McCann has made it his practice to save lives and spread
hope in the aftermath of our nation’s most infamous disasters.
After 9/11, McCann returned to Georgia and became chief medical
officer of FloridaOne DMAT (Disaster Medical Assistance Team).
Operating under FEMA, which is part of the Department
of Homeland Security, DMATs are volunteer teams of doctors, nurses, emergency
medical technicians, and pharmacists who enter disaster areas
when hospitals are closed down or inundated. McCann’s team
cared for the victims of hurricanes Katrina and Rita in the
hardest-hit parts of Mississippi and New Orleans in 2005.
Now the doctor is leveraging his firsthand experiences and his
clinical expertise to shape the burgeoning field of disaster
medicine. As incoming chair of the American
Board of Disaster Medicine, McCann has worked to create a board-certification process
for doctors to specialize in caring for victims of catastrophe.
With the first certificates awarded last fall, his efforts are
bringing more trained physicians to the front lines in times
of crisis.
“With the ongoing war on terror and the threats of severe tropical
storms and disease pandemics, it’s critical to prepare physicians
to practice medicine under emergency conditions,” says McCann,
a graduate student in public health at UMass Amherst. Just as important,
he says, disaster physicians will help communities prepare for
catastrophes. “The medical community has abrogated its responsibility
to get in there and help plan for disasters,” he says. “But during
these times, hospitals are often overwhelmed or shut down and greater
numbers of people need medical attention. So physicians must play
a central role in planning for emergencies and responding to them.”
Doctoring through no less than six major hurricanes in the Gulf
Coast, McCann has seen the most gruesome side of human tragedy—but
he has also witnessed inspiring heroism.
In Missisippi after Katrina, McCann met a young National Guardsman,
just back from Iraq, with a deep puncture wound in one eye—a potentially
blinding injury. The patient pleaded with the doctor to save his
eye so he could continue his tour of duty. “I found it incredible
that this young man must have been in debilitating pain, but all
he could think about was how he wanted to keep serving his country,”
says McCann.
Working in St.
Bernard’s Parish in Louisiana in the days following
Hurricane Rita, he treated patients who suffered painful rashes
after slogging through the sludge of storm water, chemicals, crude
oil, and sewage that filled the streets. “You never know what you’re
going to see out there,” says McCann. Some victims came to his
DMAT camps with standard bone breaks or deep abrasions. Others
arrived in cardiac arrest, preterm labor, or diabetic comas, all
brought on by stress.
In all instances, the medical team must stabilize as many patients
as possible, determine what level of care they need, then transport
them, if necessary, to the closest functioning hospital, which
may be hundreds of miles away. And the team must accomplish this
without many of the technologies available in modern hospitals,
while under ongoing threat of inclement weather, rising waters,
spreading diseases, or even terrorist attacks. “It’s a special
kind of doctor who’s drawn into this field. It takes a good commonsense
clinician who can keep a cool head under stress,” says McCann.
At present, no medical schools offer comprehensive training in
disaster medicine. Instead, physicians applying for the new specialization
must be board-certified in other specialties. To prepare for the
boards, they must cobble together disaster response, life support,
and hazardous materials courses from a number of different institutions,
including FEMA, the American Medical Association, and the U.S.
Department of Justice. As more doctors seek certification in disaster
medicine, McCann predicts that more medical schools will begin
to offer the training.
McCann says these physicians also need strong public health skills,
which is why he entered the master’s program at UMass Amherst.
“Medical skills prepare professionals to diagnose and treat individual
patients,” says Linda
Landesman, a professor in the program and
author of Public
Health Management of Disasters: The Practice Guide,
a seminal text in the emergency-preparedness field. “Public health
skills prepare a professional to work in multidisciplinary teams,
understand health issues from a community view, and understand
the factors—social, behavioral, and otherwise—that contribute to
disease.”
Because he can complete his degree online, McCann is learning
from top experts while maintaining a more-than-full-time medical
practice and, alongside his wife, home-schooling his five children.
No doubt, he has plenty of practice staying cool under stress.
Despite the pressures it brings, McCann says that doctoring under
duress brings him great satisfaction. The chance to be a hero among
heroes—and to witness humanity’s triumph in the face of unthinkable
tragedy—makes the hard work worthwhile.
“Doing this work takes a lot out of you,” he says. “But the people
we help, who turn around and help others . . . they keep us coming
back.”
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