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U Cal Videos: Disaster Preparedness, Natural Disasters
Here are some video links and excerpted brief summaries:
http://www.survivalblog.com/2009/10/...of_califo.html Disaster Preparedness: Natural Disasters Transportation and care Multiple disasters co-existing (earthquake, fire, flood) Wild fire -larger then expected Family Preparedness -Family network - getting everyone involved -List of material that needs to be packed to go -Long distance phones can work (call to foreign county, deliver message, foreign county calls to local number you could not reach), calling local people sometimes doesn't when the disaster is local. This would appear to be a failure of the phone system to update their routing tables dynamically. -Define a meeting place for your family -Stores and supplies at home -Tent, stove, propane, water -72 hour critical supply of food, medicine and water -Laundry - Something I had not thought about -Communications and information management, one of the most difficult things -Real time information systems - where the fire is, what the evacuations plan is -After action report - learn from what worked and what didn't -Reverse 911 only works for land lines. -Multiple layers of communications, multiple contacts per person -"Alternative care sites" shelter, Fairgrounds, school gymnasiums, arenas, animal shelters -Special needs patients, elderly, dialysis -First day great, everyone helping one another - Day 2 short tempers - social workers and behavioral specialists needed, neighborhoods forming -It is mentioned *many* times that people will not leave their pets behind. Include them in your preps. Earthquake -Single point of contact - single voice speaking for a set of resources -If you build it, they will come. Where lights are on, people go there. There are several phases 1. Immediate injuries - Crush injuries, Amputations, Head injuries, airway obstruction 2. Secondary illnesses - Blood pressure medication, diabetes medication, increased rate of heart attack and child birth 95% are rescued by local responders and volunteers in the first 24 hours. Disaster Preparedness: Chemical and Biological Agents Disaster Preparedness: Pandemic Influenza and Emerging Infections Disaster Preparedness: Disaster Volunteerism More Programs in Emergency Preparedness / Emergency Medicine Regards, - Ben M. |
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