AJDHM
Vol 1 No 2 (2025): July

Kanjuruhan Football Stampede (2022): Gaps in Disaster Preparedness and Response Mass-Casualty Management at A Mass Gathering Event

Gde Yulian Yogadhita (Universitas Gadjah Mada)
Widiana K Agustin (Ministry of Health Indonesia)
Dinda Atriana (Universitas Gadjah Mada)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Jul 2025

Abstract

Introduction: On October 1, 2022, a post-match crowd disturbance at Kanjuruhan Stadium in Malang gave rise to a mass-casualty incident, highlighting deficiencies in disaster preparedness and readiness of medical care teams who are responsive to potential disasters occurred soccer event. Objective: This paper analyses the Kanjuruhan tragedy within the framework of disaster preparedness and mass-casualty management using only data from the initial report and presentation slides. Methods: A qualitative case study based on the Joint Independent Fact-Finding Team report, media reports, and medical responders' testimonies in webinars, as well as an interview with a pre-hospital care coordinator. Data were thematically coded by 5 areas: risk assessment, medical readiness, events timeline, hospital response and coordination. Results: Spectator venues were fit for purpose from the athlete’s point of view but not so much from a spectators. No formal coordination system for command, evacuation, referral, communication between emergency medical service and hospital existed before the event. The use of tear gas caused problems with respiratory distress and crowd crush, while hospitals experienced a lack of patient coordination during influxes, poor triage and resource limitations. Conclusions: The event demonstrates major deficiencies in large-scale events and mass casualty management. Tougher regulations, unified command systems, compatible communications and risk-based planning can help prevent such catastrophes

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Journal Info

Abbrev

AJDHM

Publisher

Subject

Nursing Public Health

Description

1. Publicize case studies of actual DHM practices in the ASEAN region, DHM domains of original research; capacity development and policy recommendations; and collaboration between health sectors and other sectors in disasters. 2. Promote the WHO Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management (EDRM) ...