Mass decontamination (abbreviated mass decon) is the decontamination of large numbers of people, in the event of industrial, accidental, or intentional contamination by toxic, infective, caustic, polluted, or otherwise unhealthful or damaging substances.
An example is when large numbers of persons fleeing from the September 11, 2001 attacks were detained by officials, so that they could be cleansed by fire department and emergency staff. Their shoes, clothing, jewelry, and other personal effects were seized from them, the contaminated people were washed, and given replacement clothing.
Military groups, church groups, Boy Scouts groups, Girl Guides, businesses, etc. can prepare for possible contaminations by performing drills of decontamination procedures. This can have the effect of decreasing the likelihood of panic, and allowing for faster, more successful decontamination.
LAX - Los Angeles International Airport has a decon system with four soap cannons to spray down hysterical crowds. The facility features pop up tents so that once soaped, the victims can file on either side of the rig (one gender on each side) to rinse in specially designed showers where they can remove all clothing, dry off, and receive replacement clothing or other suitable modesty garb (i.e. makeshift clothing such as bedsheets, tablecloths, or garbage bags with head and arm cutouts).
Although there have been many mass casualty decon drills, the September 11th attacks resulted in a true need for mass decon. This need was met with these (and other) techniques (* - external link):
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