|
Findings from a newly-released survey indicate that there are specific levers that
government and private sector partners can use to influence and increase
overall individual and community preparedness.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Individual and
Community Preparedness Division (ICPD) released the findings from its 2015
National Household Survey of 5,000 Americans in June. The survey is designed to
measure household and individual preparedness and awareness.
Among the most significant findings, the survey found a positive
relationship between awareness of preparedness information and the action of
taking steps to prepare for a disaster.
The survey also notes a relationship between experience and
action, finding that individuals living in areas with a history of a specific
hazard and who have experienced the impact of that hazard are significantly
more likely to report they had taken basic steps to prepare themselves and
their household.
“These are positive results and really help validate the work that
FEMA and our partners across the country have been doing,” said ICPD Director
Helen Lowman, upon release of the survey. “Going forward, we will be able to
use this data to include all populations as we continue to build a culture of
preparedness.”
When it comes to awareness of preparedness information, 66 percent
of Americans living in areas with a history of hurricanes reported that they
had read, seen, or heard information on how to better prepare for a hurricane
within the past six months, the survey said.
Individuals living in areas with a history of tornadoes were the
next most aware of the pertinent preparedness information for their relevant
hazard with 53 percent of respondents in those areas saying they had read,
seen, or heard information on how to prepare for a tornado in the last six
months.
The survey included a series of oversamples in U.S. counties where
specific hazards, including: earthquakes, extreme heat, floods, hurricanes,
tornadoes, wildfires, and winter storms, present a risk to those populations.
ICPD will be going back into the field later this summer to
administer the 2016 National Household Survey.
For more information and to review a summary of the 2015 findings,
click here.
|
Receiving timely information about
severe weather can help you know when to take action to be safe. FEMA, along with the National Weather Service
(NWS) make it easy for you to receive alerts and warnings whether at home,
work, or school.
Do you know the types of alerts you can
receive and how you will receive them? The Be Smart. Know Your Alerts and Warnings guide from America’s
PrepareAthon! highlights several notification systems, including:
- Emergency Alert System (EAS): Used by authorities to send detailed warnings to broadcast, cable, satellite, and wireline pathways;
-
Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA): Free text messages sent by local authorities to equipped mobile devices within a range of cell towers broadcasting in the affected area. You do not have to sign up for WEAs; and
-
The FEMA App: Get severe weather alerts from the NWS for up to five U.S. locations; learn how to stay safe before, during, and after disasters; and more. Download the app onto your Apple or Android mobile device.
Accessing these and other notification
systems will help keep your family safe when seconds count!
Summer is in full swing and temperatures are
on the rise. According to the National Weather Service (NWS), heat is one of the leading
weather-related killers in the United States, resulting in hundreds of
fatalities each year from heat stroke and even more instances of heat-related
illnesses such as heat cramps and heat exhaustion.
Heat stroke is potentially
fatal and requires immediate medical attention. Symptoms include extremely high
body temperature, red, hot, dry skin, without sweat; rapid, strong pulse;
throbbing headache, dizziness, nausea, confusion, and unconsciousness. If you
believe someone may have heat stroke, call 911. Familiarize yourself with the signs and
symptoms of heat stroke other heat related illnesses and treatment with the CDC Extreme Heat
Prevention Guide.
The best line of defense against these
illnesses is prevention. The Ready Campaign offers the following
tips to stay safe when the mercury rises:
- Stay indoors, ideally in a location with air conditioning. If your home does not have air conditioning or if it fails, go to a public building with air conditioning such as a shopping mall or public library;
- Avoid strenuous work or physical activity during the warmest part of the day (typically 11 a.m. – 2 p.m.);
- Cover windows that receive morning or afternoon sun with drapes, shades, awnings, or louvers;
- Dress in loose-fitting, lightweight, and light-colored clothes that cover as much skin as possible; and
- Eat well-balanced, light, and regular meals.
When
necessary, NWS issues heat-related alerts to help you prepare for extreme
weather conditions. To learn more about these alerts, visit: www.nws.noaa.gov/om/heat/ww.shtml.
|
FEMA’s Individual and Community
Preparedness Division (ICPD) invites you to a webinar on Tuesday, July 19, which will feature ways houses of worship and
Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT) can partner for emergency response
training. The webinar will also highlight how these partnerships improve
engagements with diverse communities and populations.
Title: Emergency Response
Training Options for Houses of Worship
Date: Tuesday, July 19, 2016
Time: 2:00 – 3:00 p.m. EDT
Featured
Speakers:
-
Judy Head - Northland Church, Longwood, FL
-
Charlotte Franklin - Office of Emergency Management, Arlington, VA
-
Alan Harris - Office of Emergency Management, Seminole County, FL
-
Marcus Coleman - DHS Center for Faith-based & Neighborhood Partnerships
-
Tyler Krska - National CERT and Citizen Corps Program, Individual and Community Preparedness Division, FEMA
How to Join the Webinar:
We hope that you will be able to
join us on July 19!
Disclaimer: The reader recognizes that the
federal government provides links and informational data on various disaster
preparedness resources and events and does not endorse any non-federal events,
entities, organizations, services or products. Please let us know about other events
and services for individual and community preparedness that could be included
in future newsletters by contacting citizencorps@fema.dhs.gov.
|
|