Jamla

The First 24 Hours: What Actually Happens When Systems Fail

Nurse Jamla

If a large-scale conflict were to impact U.S. soil, or even just disrupt global infrastructure, the first 24 hours wouldn’t look like the movies. It would look… confusing. Not immediate chaos. Not instant collapse. Just enough disruption to make everything harder.

  • Phones still work… but networks are overloaded
  • Hospitals still function… but staffing is strained
  • Stores are open… but shelves start thinning
  • Emergency services respond… but call volumes surge

And most people? They wait. They wait for clarity. For instructions. For someone to tell them what’s happening, but here’s the reality: 👉 The first 24 hours are when outcomes are decided. Not because everything breaks, but because this is when systems are stressed, not yet failed.

What This Means for You

Preparedness isn’t about panic.

It’s about understanding how systems behave under pressure.

In disaster response, we talk about:

  • Surge capacity
  • Resource allocation
  • System degradation, not immediate collapse

That means:

✔ Hospitals don’t shut down—they get overwhelmed
✔ EMS doesn’t stop responding—they get delayed
✔ Supply chains don’t disappear—they slow down

And in that gap?👉 Individuals become the first line of resilience

What You Should Be Ready for in the First 24 Hours

1. Limited access-not zero access

You may still have:

  • Electricity
  • Internet
  • Access to care

But not reliably.

2. Delays in care

That “quick ER visit” may turn into hours.

That ambulance response time? Longer than expected.

3. Information overload + misinformation

Social media will fill the gaps, accurate or not.

Knowing who to trust becomes critical.

The Question to Ask Yourself

If systems are strained, but not gone, 👉 Can you function independently for 24–72 hours?

Not forever. Just long enough to reduce your reliance on overwhelmed systems.

Start Here (Simple, Realistic Steps)

  • Have 3 days of water and food
  • Know where to get credible information (not just social media)
  • Keep essential medications accessible
  • Have a basic plan for communication with family

This isn’t extreme. This is baseline readiness.

Final Thought

Disasters don’t start with collapse. They start with friction, and the people who recognize that early, are the ones who stay ahead of it.

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