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General Preparedness Preparedness Planning

5 Tips for Talking To Your Spouse about Emergency Preparedness

It can be difficult to bring your spouse around to the idea of emergency preparedness. It’s one thing to have a great intellectual and even heart-felt discussion about tragic disasters throughout the world or nationally that leave families and children hungry and without shelter. However, to convince your spouse to put some of your paycheck toward preparing for a flood or an earthquake takes some know-how.

1. Don’t Bombard Your Spouse with Information

Bring them along slowly, one step at a time. Don’t cram several worst case scenarios into a one hour meeting. Your spouse will shut down emotionally and mentally, even if they appear attentive and interested in what you have to say. Prioritize what you want to protect yourselves against first, based on your location and what’s happening in the news. For example, if major earthquakes are devastating different countries around the world, talk about the news with your spouse first, and use one meeting to talk about earthquake preparedness. Don’t suddenly transition into talking about preparing for bio-weapons or hurricanes, which can lead to information overload. Talk about “smaller” emergencies first, such as a flat tire after dark or a power outage that lasts for more than a day.

2. Be Prepared

To be effective in a discussion with your spouse about emergency preparedness, you must be prepared. Don’t come to the meeting without many answers, or that can cause your spouse to doubt that it’s worth preparing at all, or that you know what you’re doing. Learn about emergency preparedness and draft a plan. You should value your spouse’s input and wisdom, and modify your plan as needed. However, don’t show up empty handed, or answer “I don’t know” to most of the questions they will have.

3. Do the Math

Emergency preparedness takes money, for supplies, kits and some repairs to your home or cars. When money is tight, it can be hard to persuade a spouse to use what little money you do have for food storage, water filters and other necessities. Put your spouse at ease with a budget, showing them how you can both make this work. Most likely you both will have to make sacrifices in a spending area or two, and you should be ready to make suggestions on how much to cut or completely eliminate. Couch the budget to your spouse as a draft, and encourage them to help you modify it. Make “Emergency Preparedness” one category of the budget, and use subcategories underneath, such as “Light” and “Communications”.

4. Refer to Experts

Although you may be an expert on emergency preparedness because of all the reading and research you’ve done to date, it helps to show your spouse what the experts are saying. Find sources that your spouse considers credible, and share news and information on emergency preparedness from those experts or organizations. Invite them to read an article, blog post or other book with you, and follow that up with how you can apply what you’ve learned in your home. Ask questions and elicit commentary from your spouse, to help you figure out where they stand on emergency preparedness.

5. Attend a Class Together

Many spouses will agree to attend classes that benefit the family, such as a CPR class. Take advantage of attending classes together that your spouse will find beneficial, and that also relate to emergency preparedness. It’s a way to have someone else introduce the topic for you, and teach vital skills to you and your spouse at the same time. Class attendees and the teacher might share information and personal anecdotes on emergency preparedness that will reassure your spouse that it’s normal and responsible to be prepared.

Don’t delay speaking with your spouse about emergency preparedness. Before you get started, take the time you need to strategize your best approach using these 5 tips.

Categories
General Preparedness Preparedness Planning

Increase your chance of surviving a plane crash

I was recently with a friend who survived the United Airlines flight that “landed” in the Hudson River and it made me start thinking about whether or not there were things I could do to increase my chances of survival if I were ever in a plane crash. I did a little research and wanted to share some quick tips I learned.

Some do’s:

1. Pay attention during the safety briefing. Many people ignore these…but in a panic…will forget what to do. Paying attention reinforces the correct things to do.

2. Sit within 5 rows of an emergency exit. Statistics show that this increases your chances of surviving a crash.

3. Count how many rows between you an the exits. Do this for the exit in front and you and behind you as your primary exit may be blocked.

4. Take a minute to think of a plan. A “what would I do if”. Look at the exits, plan where you would go, etc. Having a plan in mind increases your chance of survival and will help keep you from “freezing”

5. Be extra aware during the first 3 minutes of flight and the last 8 minutes. These are the time windows where most problems occur. Be ready to react if you have to.

6. Wear your seat belt properly, especially if you think you are going to be in a crash.

7. Brace yourself properly. You want to limit the amount of blunt force trauma you may receive.

Some dont’s:

1. Take sleeping pills or drink heavily when flying. This will obviously affect your ability to react.

2. Wear sandals, high heels or slip on type footwear. You don’t want to have to escape with bare feet.

3. If you are in a crash..DON’T try to save your carry on, purse, cell phone, etc. This will cost you time and may hinder your exit.

4. Sit in the bulkhead seats. The force of hitting the wall in front of you can cause more damage then bracing against a seat in front of you.

These are just some quick tips and ideas. The same general rules apply here as in other situations. The more you plan…the better off you will do.

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Businesses Need a Disaster Plan

The Red Cross is warning businesses to have a disaster plan after it recently suffered fire damages. Fire broke out in the restroom of The Chapter in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. This caused all services, including blood services, to be shut down due to ceiling damage and the restroom itself being destroyed. The Murfreesboro post reports:

Businesses should not risk operating without a disaster plan. While reports vary, as many as 40 percent of small businesses do not reopen after a major disaster like a flood, tornado or earthquake. These shattered businesses were unprepared for a disaster and they had no plan or backup systems. A disaster plan should consider three subjects: human resources, physical resources, and business continuity.

“We were very fortunate the fire wasn’t any worse because it could have caused some major damage,” said Red Cross CEO Greg King. “Local businesses should definitely have a plan in place of how to continue operations after a disaster such as a fire, flood or tornado.”

Every business owner at the bare minimum needs an emergency kit in the workplace in case they need to evacuate or bunker down at work. Extra kits would be great to help employees and customers who are stranded at your business during an emergency. Following the purchase of office kits, you’ll need to formulate your plans for continuing the business after a disaster.

Source:

http://www.murfreesboropost.com/red-cross-suffers-fire-issues-caution-for-others-cms-20797