Disasters not necessarily occur one at a time rather multiple disasters may occur amid another, in a form of secondary or cascading disaster or a new disaster may occur from a new origin due to the aggravated vulnerability factors. In past years, a number of cases of prevalence multiple disasters while dealing with another or a situation of crisis within a crisis emerged (e.g.: Haiti Earthquake, 2010; Cox Bazaar, Bangladesh; Kerala Flood, 2018; Typhoon Haiyan, 2013; Fukushima Nuclear Disaster, 2013). Considering these incidences as an opportunity and drawing lessons from them has led the global policy regime to emphasize largely on a holistic, proactive and an integrated multi-hazard disaster risk management approach. Despite the clear mention of multi-hazard in global policies, the practicality is often seen low and rather visualizes hazards in isolation. Despite the complexity in comprehending the multi-hazard risk assessments, the revamping of the approaches of risk management is the need of the hour when the frequency and severity of climate extreme events are increasing as an impact of climate change. The global pandemic of coronavirus has drawn the attention of the policymakers to the multi-hazard approach as a number of climate extreme events and other human-induced disasters occurred in chorus. This chapter underlines the need for a change in the disaster risk management approach to a multi-hazard approach with involvement of multi-stakeholders at regional level, highlighting some of the past case studies of concurrently occurring disasters.