25
Disaster Planning for Disaster Planning for Children and Families Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT FL-5 DMAT

Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Disaster Planning for Children Disaster Planning for Children and Familiesand Families

Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEPLou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP

Miami Children’s HospitalMiami Children’s Hospital

FL-5 DMATFL-5 DMAT

Page 2: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Best practices?Best practices?

We’re getting practice We’ve got little data Every practice setting is different

Just like kids, no plan or policy fits all.

Page 3: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Getting a gripGetting a grip

The 9-11 attacks, Katrina and the threat of pandemic flu have skewed our planning processes

The basics must be tackled first and addressed with solid plans.

Page 4: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

For children, there’s nothing more basic than familyfamily.

Page 5: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

You don’t You don’t need a need a distinct distinct

Pediatric Pediatric Plan if Plan if you…you…

Empower and supportEmpower and support

FamiliesFamilies

Page 6: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Every day can be a disaster

Strengthen critical community infrastructure to meet the daily needs of children and their caregivers

Page 7: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

The family is the strongest unit of survival Personal identification

• On each person• Family records• Centralized records (photos,

fingerprints, DNA)

Page 8: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

The family is the strongest unit of survival Family identification

• Begin data collection and identification at the time of first contact with the response system

• Develop family identifiers (photos, unique numbers, barcodes)

Page 9: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

The family is the strongest unit of survival Keep families together

• Shelter families together• Evacuate families together• Take the time to do it right • Optimize existing resources to

assist with record-keeping and planning

Page 10: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

The family is the strongest unit of survival Reunification in family planning

• School and workplace plans• Rendezvous points• Communication plans• Identifying materials as a part of

evacuation supplies

Page 11: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

The family is the strongest unit of survival Reunification planning by

agencies• Assist with integration of

documentation systems across agencies

• Support appropriate identification record programs

• Work with reunification agencies and programs before a disaster occurs

Page 12: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Family disaster preparedness isn’t cheap Encourage preparedness incentives

• Insurance discounts• Tax-free days, tax credits(?)

Expand funding programs to help pay for supplies/equipment

• Medications/Medical goods• Food/formula• Batteries, flashlights, etc

Community service projects addressing family preparedness

Page 13: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Disaster SheltersDisaster Shelters

Family-friendly

Family-safe

Family-functional

Page 14: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Family-friendly shelters Allow families to remain

together and care for each other Plans consider the special

needs of children• Food• Supplies• Hygiene• Activities• Psychological support

Page 15: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Family-safe shelters Healthy environment

• Smoke free• Drug/alcohol free

Safety and security• “Child-proofing”• Supervision• Exit/internal security• Ability to isolate children from

disturbing situations

Page 16: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Family-functional shelters Information center Recovery resources available Access to communication resources Access to medical care/resources Child care/supervision

• Organize shelter occupants to assist• Utilize community child care workers• Utilize community mental health/child

life resources for therapeutic play and psychological guidance for families

Page 17: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Psychology: Strength vs. scarring A culture of disaster

preparedness Make disaster preparedness a

part of the way we bring up our children• “Duck and cover”

Page 18: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Information about pediatric disaster Information about pediatric disaster psychology is abundant.psychology is abundant.

Pediatric mental health programs are not.Pediatric mental health programs are not.

Page 19: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Family IssuesFamily Issues

Psychology: Strength vs. scarring Parents/caregivers School personnel Primary medical care providers Disaster responders

Advocate for stronger mental health systems.

Page 20: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Pediatric and Family Disaster Pediatric and Family Disaster Planning ResourcesPlanning Resources

Experienced parents Family representatives

School-based parent groups Parents of children with disabilities and

special medical/psychological needs

Primary care medical practitioners and professional organizations

Mental health professionals State EMS for Children programs

Page 21: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Pediatric and Family Disaster Pediatric and Family Disaster Planning ResourcesPlanning Resources

Pediatric Terrorism and Disaster Preparedness: A Resource for Pediatricians

www.ahrq.gov/research/pedprep/resource.htm

American Academy of Pediatrics “Children and Disasters” website

www.aap.org/terrorism

Columbia University National Center for Disaster Preparedness website

www.pediatricpreparedness.org/

Page 22: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Pediatric and Family Disaster Pediatric and Family Disaster Planning ResourcesPlanning Resources

National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies Disaster Planning Initiative

www.naccrra.org/disaster/

National Advisory Committee on Children and Terrorism Recommendations to the Secretary

www.bt.cdc.gov/children/recommend.asp

HRSA/MCHB EMS for Children Program website

http://bolivia.hrsa.gov/emsc/

Page 23: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Pediatric and Family Disaster Pediatric and Family Disaster Planning ResourcesPlanning Resources

FEMA for Kids websitewww.fema.gov/kids

Ready Kids websitewww.ready.gov/kids

JumpSTART websitewww.jumpstarttriage.com

Page 24: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Challenges to YouChallenges to You

Focus on the basics Focus on families Think like a parent Empower the caregivers to give

the care

Page 25: Disaster Planning for Children and Families Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP Miami Children’s Hospital FL-5 DMAT

Challenges to YouChallenges to You

Recruit the help of child and family advocates

Use the knowledge and experience of others

Collect data!