Coccolini, FedericoSartelli, MassimoKluger, YoramPikoulis, EmmanouilKaramagioli, EvikaMoore, Ernest EBiffl, Walter LPeitzman, AndrewHecker, AndreasChirica, MirceaDamaskos, DimitriosOrdonez, CarlosVega, FelipeFraga, Gustavo PChiarugi, MassimoDi Saverio, SalomoneKirkpatrick, Andrew WAbu-Zidan, FikriMefire, Alain CLeppaniemi, AriKhokha, VladimirSakakushev, BorisCatena, RodolfoCoimbra, RaulAnsaloni, LucaCorbella, DavideCatena, Fausto2020-04-122020-04-122020-04-09World Journal of Emergency Surgery. 2020 Apr 09;15(1):26http://hdl.handle.net/1880/111789https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/44536Abstract Since December 2019, the world is potentially facing one of the most difficult infectious situations of the last decades. COVID-19 epidemic warrants consideration as a mass casualty incident (MCI) of the highest nature. An optimal MCI/disaster management should consider all four phases of the so-called disaster cycle: mitigation, planning, response, and recovery. COVID-19 outbreak has demonstrated the worldwide unpreparedness to face a global MCI. This present paper thus represents a call for action to solicitate governments and the Global Community to actively start effective plans to promote and improve MCI management preparedness in general, and with an obvious current focus on COVID-19.COVID-19 the showdown for mass casualty preparedness and management: the Cassandra SyndromeJournal Article2020-04-12enThe Author(s)https://doi.org/10.1186/s13017-020-00304-5