Information Roles in Disaster Management - Part 1

Preview:

DESCRIPTION

Webinar presented on July 18, 2012 as part of the Medical Library Association's Disaster Information Specialization Program.

Citation preview

Information Roles in Disaster ManagementDay 1

July 18, 20121300 – 1400 CT

Robin Featherstone, MLISLiaison Librarian (Medicine)

Life Sciences Library, McGill Universityrobin.featherstone@mcgill.ca

Course materials: http://www.mlanet.org/education/dis/info_roles.html

Activity 1

• Consult your completed hazards checklist

• Using your chat box, share:– your geographic location – the three hazards you identified

Agenda

Disaster Information Specializationwww.mlanet.org/education/dis

What is it? Medical Library Association continuing education program funded by the National Library of Medicine

All program courses and activities earn MLA continuing education credit and may also be used toward AHIP

How much does it cost to students? It’s free!

Who can participate? Anyone.

Disaster Information SpecializationHow do I take a course? In-person and online (all available online)

What courses are there? Basic level:

1. Disaster Health Information Sources: The Basics2. US Response to Disasters and Public Health Emergencies3. Information Roles in Disaster Management4. National Incident Management System, an Introduction  5. Introduction to Incident Command System

Advanced level:• Disasters in an International Context• Ethical and Legal Aspects of Respons• A Seat at the Table: Working with Local Responders• CBRN [Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear] and Hazmat

Information Resources

Disaster Information Specialist

• Provides disaster-related library or information services as part of their ongoing job functions

• Possesses knowledge and skills to support

disaster management

• Does more than protect library collections and maintain library operations

Selected Continuity of Operations Resources

• NN/LM Emergency & Preparedness Toolkit http://nnlm.gov/ep/

• Halsted, Deborah D., Richard P. Jasper, and Felicia M. Little. Disaster Planning: A How-to-Do-It Manual for Librarians. New York: Neal-Schuman, 2005.

Objectives

DefinitionsDisaster: a serious disruption of the functioning of society, causing widespread human, material or environmental losses which exceed the ability of affected society to cope using only its own resources.

Emergency: a situation that is out of control and requires immediate attention.

Event: an occurrence that has the potential to affect living beings and/or their environment; a realization of a hazard.

http://www.wadem.org/guidelines/glossary.pdf

Disaster Categories

Natural Man made

Earthquakes Chemical spills

Hurricanes Industrial accidents

Tsunamis Terrorist attacks

Etc. Etc.

Natural or Man made?

Floods

Forest Fires

Avalanches

Epidemics

Disaster Management Cycle

Planning

Response

Recovery

Disaster Workforce

Licensed or trained

Paid or volunteer

Permanent or as-needed workers

… who play a defined role in…

All-hazards preparedness, response and recovery

In implementing Emergency Support Functions 6 & 8: Mass care, Emergency Assistance, Disaster Housing & Human Services;

Public Health and Medical Services

Disaster Workforce: Licensed/credentialed health professionals (ESAR – VHP, 2011)

Disaster Workforce: Additional licensed or trained professionals

Selected core & sub competencies for disaster medicine and public health

4.0 Communicate effectively with others in a disaster or public health emergency

4.1 Identify authoritative sources for information in a disaster or public health emergency

4.3 Identify strategies for appropriate sharing of information in a disaster or public health emergency

(Walsh et al., 2012)

Disaster Health Information

Peer-reviewed scholarly literature• Journal articles• Books

“Grey” Literature• Reports• Summaries• Surveillance data• Training materials• Conference proceedings

HazLit Database

Role of Social Media

“Clearly, social media are changing the way people communicate not only in their day-to-day lives, but also during disasters that threaten public health.”

(Merchant, 2011)

Information use by disaster preparedness professionals• Influenced by their training• Viewed information as a decision-making

tool• Considered information to include

observable environmental data and conversations

• Relied on social networks and the Internet• Revisited trusted organizational sites (i.e.,

CDC)

(Folb, 2011)

Desired information types

• Peer organization experience, lessons-learned documents (case studies)

• Standards• Operations,

procedures, manuals• Legal, regulatory• Grants, funding

• Potential local hazards• Vulnerable populations• Emerging hazards,

novel events• News• Current conditions

(Folb, 2011)

What do emergency managers see as the roles of librarians?

• Creating and maintaining taxonomies with expert input• Serving as a clearinghouse of knowledge concerning the

different aspects of disasters• Equipping libraries to access real-time emergency

telemedicine networks• Working with specialists to identify high-quality information• Developing easy-to-use methods of delivering specific content

(Turoff & Hiltz, 2008)

• Producing annotated bibliographies and syntheses

• Participating in call centers taking questions from the public

• Developing FAQs for local emergency preparedness and response and making them easy to locate

• Assisting in text and data mining, aggregating and compiling information to support public health decision-making

• Sharing expertise with those in developing countries through an international network of librarians and archivists

(Turoff & Hiltz, 2008)

What do emergency managers see as the roles of librarians?

• Become part of the network• Partner with trusted organizations• Get involved in pre-career training

(Folb, 2011)• Be part of your organization’s disaster

plan• Monitor information using alerting services• Be strategic in your communication plan –

consider audience capacity and use appropriate technologies

• Evaluate your services

(Featherstone, et al. 2012)

Recommendations for librarians

Homework - Activity 2

• Read the article by Erik Auf der Helde, The Importance of Evidence-Based Disaster Planning

• Reflect on his recommended interventions (summarized on the handout labeled Activity 2)

• Identify a professional service you could provide

References

Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Public Law 93-288 as amended), http://fema.gov/about/stafact.shtm

Donohue, A. (May 21, 2012). Emergency Preparedness and Librarians: A Match Made in Hospitals! Poster Presentation given at the Medical Library Association Conference, Seattle WA

FEMA (2012). Tabletop Exercise. Accessed April 7, 2012 from:  http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw000/watersecurity/tools/trainingcd/Pages/intro.html,

Featherstone, R., Boldt, R., Torabi, N. & Konrad, S. (2012). Provision of Pandemic Disease Information by Health Sciences Librarians: A Multisite Comparative Case Series. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 100(2), 104-112. Accessed May 12, 2012 from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3324800/

Featherstone, R., Lyon, B. & Ruffin, A. (2008). Library roles in disaster response: an oral history project by the National Library of Medicine. Journal of the Medical Library Association, 96(4), 343-350. Accessed April 3, 2012 from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2568836/

References cont.Folb, B. (March 30, 2011). Information Needs and Practices of Disaster Response Professionals:

Findings and Implications. . [Presentation given at the Disaster Information Outreach Symposium, Bethesda, MD). Accessed April 2, 2012 from: http://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?Live=10102

Merchant, R.M., Elmer, S. & Lurie, N. (2011). Integrating Social Media into Emergency-Preparedness Efforts. NEJM. 365(4). 289-291.

Turoff, M. & Starr, R. (March 6, 2008). Information Seeking Behavior and Viewpoints of Emergency Preparedness and Management Professionals Concerned with Health and Medicine. [Report prepared for the National Library of Medicine]. Accessed April 2, 2012 from: http://web.njit.edu/~turoff/Papers/FinalReportNLMTuroffHiltzMarch11.htm

Walsh, L., Subbarao, I., Gebbie, K., et al. (2012). Core Competencies for Disaster Medicine and Public Health. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness. 6(1), 44-52.

Zach, L. (March 30, 2011). Librarians’ Perceptions of Roles in Disaster Activities. [Presentation given at the Disaster Information Outreach Symposium, Bethesda, MD). Accessed April 2, 2012 from: http://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?Live=10102

Image CreditsPlanning the programmes.jpg image by David Brewer:

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Planning_the_programmes.jpgRadiologist in San Diego CA 2010 by Zackstarr: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

Presentation Slides & Course Materialshttp://www.mlanet.org/education/dis/info_roles.html

This project is funded by the National Library of Medicine under contract HHS-N-276-2010-00782-P

Acknowledgement

Program Informationhttp://www.mlanet.org/education/dis/

QUESTIONS

Recommended