The recent Halloween crowd crush incident in Itaewon, Seoul, Korea, highlights a woeful inadequacy in our collective knowledge about crowd disasters. Underscored is a lack of detailed information on the causes of death and the injuries sustained. While traumatic asphyxiation has been widely implicated as the primary cause of death, the wider spectrum of injury patterns and their causative mechanisms remain poorly identified. Challenges to advancing our understanding of crowd disasters include limited and restricted access to official reports, incomplete documentation, and reliance on unofficial sources for information. There is a need for targeted research to better understand crowd dynamics that lead to injuries. Future directions should prioritize better interdisciplinary collaboration, improved data sharing, and computer simulations to model real-world events. Further inquiry into human stampedes and crowd crushes, such as the Itaewon incident, is urgently needed to prevent similar tragedies; focusing on the types and mechanisms of injuries is a crucial first step to enhancing emergency preparedness and disaster response.
Keywords: crowd crush; crowd disaster; crush injuries; human stampede; seoul halloween crowd crush.
Copyright © 2024, Chang et al.