Не рискуй, и не проиграешь, или обучение

Вирджиния Домарк
    14.03.22

   Совершенно случайно вышли мы на широкиц простор.И вот что открылось взору.

  Marian Brooke Rogers OBE is a British psychologist who is a Professor of Behavioural Science and Security at King's College London where she is Deputy Head of the Department of War Studies. She is a social psychologist who studies risk and threat. In 2014 she was asked to chair the Cabinet Office Behavioural Science Expert Group (BSEG). In 2019 she was appointed Chair of the Home Office Science Advisory Council (HOSAC). Professor Rogers was appointed to the Prime Minister's Council for Science and Technology in 2020.

 Member, Independent Scientific Advisory Board of the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Protection Unit (HPRU) in Modelling and Health Economics
COVID Infection Survey Advisory Board Sub-group
Welsh Government Technical Advisory Group (TAG) (COVID-19)
UKHSA Behavioural Science Insights Unit (BSIU) External Advisory Group
Digital Security by Design Social Science Hub+ (DescribeHub) Advisory Board (2021 to present)
DfE/DHSC/UUK Higher education Expert Group (COVID-19)
Co-Chair, Independent Scientific Pandemic Insights Group on Behaviour (SPI-B) in response to COVID-19 (2020 to present)
International Olympic Committee Independent Expert Panel (2020 to present)
National Preparedness Commission (2020 to present)
Professor of Behavioural Science and Security, King’s College London (Department of War Studies);
Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE)
Chair, Home Office Science Advisory Council (HOSAC);
Chair, Cabinet Office Behavioural Science Expert Group (BSEG) for the National Risk Assessment (NRA) and National Security Risk Assessment (NSRA);
Member, Home Office Science and Technology Oversight Governance Board;
Member, Home Office, Office for Security and Counter Terrorism (OSCT), Science, Technology, Analysis and Research (STAR), Programme Challenge Board;
Member, Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA);Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear (CBRN) Recovery Science Advisory Group;
Member, Cabinet Office Communities Prepared National Group;
Member, Cabinet Office;Infrastructure Security and Resilience Industry Forum (ISRIF)
Member, UK Cabinet Office Community Resilience Programme Steering Group;;
Member, Combating Jihadist Terrorism and Extremism (CO-JIT) Editorial Advisory Board
Member, London Resilience Partnership Counter-Terrorism Preparedness and Societal Resilience (CTPSR) Academic Advisory Board;
External Adviser, Centre of Excellence in Terrorism, Resilience, Intelligence and Organised Crime;(CENTRIC);Research Advisory Board;;
International Advisory Board for the ‘Resilience, International Policies,;Practices and;Discourses’ (Taylor and Francis journal);;
Fellow, Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufacture and Commerce (RSA);
Fellow, Higher Education Academy
Owner and Director of Disasters, Extremism, Terrorism, Emergency Response (DETER) Analysis, Ltd.
Friends of Wimbledon Choral Society
Omicron Delta Kappa (National Leadership Society, USA)
Psi-Chi (Psychological Honour Society, USA) ;
Past
Swedish Research Council Project Review Panel on Societal Security
Member, Greater London Authority (GLA) London Resilience Communicating with the Public Group;
Member, Greater London Authority (GLA) London Resilience Academic Group;
Member,;UK;Cabinet Office Community Resilience Guiding Principles Advisory Board; * Member, Society for Risk Analysis (SRA);
Member, Public Health England Emergency Response Development Group’s Psychosocial and Behavioural Issues Sub-group (ERDB PBI)
Member, The National Academies of Sciences Engineering and Medicine Challenges in Initiating and Conducting Long-term Health Monitoring of Populations Following Nuclear and Radiological Emergencies in the United States Workshop Organising Committee;
Member, Reduce Explosive Violence, Increase Victim Empowerment (REVIVE) Advisory Board;
Member, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Expert Consulting Group on;Emergency Public Communication;(Drafting of DS475 IAEA Safety Standards);
Member, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Expert Consulting Group on ‘Communicating with the Public in a Nuclear or Radiological Emergency’;
Honorary Research Fellow Emergency Response Department of Public Health England (PHE);;
Member, Cabinet Office High Impact Threats Expert Group;
The Royal Society’s Standing Committee on Scientific Aspects of International Security;
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Mentor for;the;‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ IDEAS Factory Sandpit and Sandpit Projects;
Canadian Research and Technology Initiative (CRTI) Subject Matter Expert DEMOS Resilient Nation Advisory Board
Governor, Thorpe Lea Elementary (2017 to 2019)
In receipt of research funding from:

National Institute of Health Research;(NIHR)
The European Commission;(EC)
EPSRC;
ESRC;
AHRC;
Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure (CPNI);
Deloitte;
Government Digital Service (GDS);
Avon and Somerset Police;
Home Office;
CDE;
Defence Science and Technology Laboratories (DSTL);
Institut;de Radioprotection et de;Surete;Nuclearie;(IRSN);;
British Energy;
EDF;
British Psychological Society (BPS);
Unilever;
Consulting, lectures, and media fees received from (none related to COVID-19):

Defra (CBRN)
Cabinet Office
Home Office
DSTL
BBC
ITV
SKY
France 24
Emergency planning College
Prospect Magazine
RUSI
IISS
International Centre for Parliamentary Studies (ICPS)
Northeastern University Institute for the International Education of Students (IES Abroad)
Indiana University – Purdue
Public Policy Exchange
University of London International Programmes
IAEA
Canadian Government
US Government
Voice of Russia Radio
AON Risk Solutions
NATO
Redline Aviation
CENTRA Technology
DURACORP
London Technology Network Business Fellow

 Rogers trained in social psychology and specialised in the study of social groups.[2] She obtained her PhD degree from Royal Holloway, University of London in 2003.[3] After earning her doctorate, Rogers joined King's College London as a research fellow in the King's Centre for Risk Management.[4] Her early work explored the formation of attitudes and beliefs, and the impact of attitudes and beliefs on behaviour and mental health. Her interest in the interactions between attitudes, beliefs, and behaviour led her to explore risk perception and risk communication across a variety of contexts. Some of her earliest investigations into chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) events looked to support hospitals in their planning for radiological warfare.

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 Hospitals plan for terror attacks. 15 August 2007, 17:17 GMT 18:17 UK
 
A policeman wearing a Civilian Responder suit and a respirator
Police would wear protective suits in the event of a CBRN attack
Emergency procedures to lock down certain hospitals in the event of a radioactive terrorist attack have been drawn up, the BBC has learned.
The measure is part of ongoing preparations to cope with any attack using chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear materials.

BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner says the security services have long warned of this scenario.

However, there is no currently no specific information about such a plot.
Preparations to deal with a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear attack, known as 'CBRN', include what is known as 'a lockdown'.

This is an emergency procedure for keeping away victims contaminated by dangerous radioactive dust from hospitals, so as not to contaminate others inside.

Police - and possibly the Army - would be deployed in protective clothing to form a cordon outside hospitals near the source of the radioactivity.

They would direct victims instead to mobile tents called "Mass Treatment Centres".

Bed shortages

The Home Office says it has provided 360 decontamination units for use around the country but according to Dr Brooke Rogers, from King's College London, the government does not have enough resources to cope with such an attack.

"In terms of responding to a radiological attack I would not say that we have the facilities to respond to that... we don't have enough beds to begin with for people who aren't radioactive.

"There is an issue of funding - we don't even have enough decontamination tents, if we take them to the scene of the accident it's a long process so it's quite a big issue".

Analysts predict that in the event of such an attack there would actually be few extra casualties caused by radiation.

The biggest problems, they believe, would be the psychological impact on the population and the long-term economic effects of built-up areas being contaminated, albeit for a limited period.

As part of the government's strategy, the exact situation surrounding a CBRN attack would be communicated to the public and advice would be given on where to get treatment.


 Пока это все.Контачим профессорку.