The Survival Guide for Natural Disasters
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The Survival Guide for Natural Disasters - Federal Emergency Management Agency
Federal Emergency Management Agency
The Survival Guide for Natural Disasters
EAN 8596547385486
DigiCat, 2022
Contact: DigiCat@okpublishing.info
Table of Contents
How to Prepare for an Earthquake
How to Prepare for a Flood
How to Prepare for a Hurricane
How to Prepare for a Tornado
How to Prepare for a Wildfire
How to Prepare for a Winter Storm
How to Provide Emergency Medical Help:
First Aid Case and Kits
Emergency Rescue and Transportation Procedures
First Aid Handbook in Case of Injury:
Specific Injuries
Fractures
Climatic Injuries
How to Prepare for an Earthquake
Table of Contents
Earthquakes can bring mild to violent shaking and can occur anytime, anywhere. This guide can help you protect yourself, your family, and your property before, during, and after an earthquake.
KNOW YOUR RISK
WHAT: An earthquake is the sudden, rapid shaking of the earth, caused by the breaking and shifting of subterranean rock as it releases strain that has accumulated over a long time. Initial mild shaking may strengthen and become extremely violent within seconds. Additional earthquakes, called aftershocks, may occur for hours, days, or even months. Most are smaller than the initial earthquake but larger magnitude aftershocks also occur.
WHEN: Earthquakes can happen at any time of the year and occur without warning.
WHERE: All U.S. states and territories are at some risk for earthquakes. The risk is higher in identified seismic zones.
IMPACT: Larger earthquakes may cause deaths, injuries, and extensive property damage. Most casualties and injuries during an earthquake occur when: people fall while trying to walk or run during the shaking; when they are hit by falling, flying, or sliding household items or non-structural debris; and/or when they are struck or trapped by collapsing walls or other parts of the building. Transportation, power, water, gas, and other services may be disrupted. In some areas, shaking can cause liquefaction — when the ground acts more like a liquid. When this happens the ground can no longer support the weight of a building. In coastal areas, earthquakes under the sea floor can cause tsunamis.
Forecasted Frequency of Earthquake Shaking
This level of shaking is capable of: cracking windows; knocking dishes, glassware, knickknacks, and books off shelves and pictures off walls; moving or overturning furniture; and cracking weak plaster, adobe buildings, and some poorly built masonry buildings.
This page provides an overview of protective actions to take before, during, and after an earthquake. Additional information is provided in the following pages for each phase.
1 BEFORE: PREPARE
Take action now, before an earthquake hits.
Secure items that might fall and cause injuries (e.g., bookshelves, mirrors, light fixtures).
Practice how to Drop, Cover, and Hold On by participating in a ShakeOut earthquake drill (www.ShakeOut.org)
Store critical supplies and documents
Plan how you will communicate with family members.
2 DURING: SURVIVE
As soon as you feel the shaking,
DROP down onto your hands and knees so the earthquake doesn’t knock you down.
COVER your head and neck with your arms to protect yourself from falling debris. If you are in danger from falling objects, and you can move safely, crawl to a safer place or seek cover (e.g., under a desk or table).
HOLD ON to any sturdy covering so you can move with it until the shaking stops.
3 AFTER: RECOVER
When the shaking stops, before you move, look around for things that might fall or for dangerous debris on the ground.
If you are in a damaged building and there is a safe way out through the debris, leave and go to an open space outside, away from damaged areas.
If you are trapped, do not move about or kick up dust.
If you have a cell phone with you, use it to call or text for help.
Tap on a pipe or wall or use a whistle, if you have one, so that rescuers can locate you.
Once safe, monitor local news reports (e.g., radio, TV, social media, and cell phone text alerts), for emergency information and instructions.
Protect Yourself Before, During, and After an Earthquake
HOW TO RECOGNIZE THAT AN EARTHQUAKE IS HAPPENING
You may experience a shaking or a rolling motion in the walls, floor, or ground. This movement may grow more extreme within seconds.
If you do not DROP down immediately, you may be knocked off your feet. You may not be able to walk or run.
Objects may fall off shelves, light fixtures may swing or fall from ceilings, or tall furniture may fall over.
There may be dust or glass particles in the air or on the ground. You may hear noises similar to a heavy truck or train passing nearby.
EMERGENCY NOTIFICATIONS
Although there is no advance notice of an earthquake, emergency information will be provided immediately after through radio and TV broadcasts and via Wireless Emergency Alerts texted to cell phones. In addition to commercial radios, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Weather Radio broadcasts alerts and warnings directly from the National Weather Service for all hazards. You may also sign up in advance to receive emergency notifications from your local emergency services.
Free smart phone apps, such as those available from FEMA and the American Red Cross, provide information about shelters, how to provide first aid, and how to seek assistance for recovery. (Search for the FEMA App or Red Cross Apps on your iPhone, android, or other mobile device). The U.S. Geological Survey manages the Earthquake Notification Service, which provides free notification emails when earthquakes happen in your area or anywhere in the world. Visit: https://sslearthquake.usgs.gov/ens for more information.
DEVELOP A COMMUNICATIONS PLAN
Your family may not be together when an earthquake hits, so it is important to know how you will contact one another and how you will get back together in case of an emergency. Landline and cellular phone systems are often overwhelmed following a disaster, so you may need to use text messaging or social media to communicate with family and friends. Keep important numbers written down in your wallet in case you cannot access the contact list in your phone.
Here are a few easy steps to start your emergency communication plan:
Understand how to receive emergency alerts and warnings. Make sure all household members are able to get alerts about an emergency from local officials. Check with your local emergency management agency to see what is available in your area.
Discuss family/household plans for disasters that may affect your area and plan where to go. Plan together in advance so that everyone in the household understands where to go during a different type of disaster like a hurricane, tornado, or wildfire.
Collect information. Create a paper copy of the contact information for your family that includes:
phone (work, cell, office)
social media
medical facilities, doctors, service providers
school
Identify information and pick an emergency meeting place. Things to consider:
Decide on safe, familiar places where your family can go for protection or to reunite.
Make sure these locations are accessible for household members with disabilities or access and functional needs.
If you have pets or service animals, think about animal-friendly locations.
Examples of meeting places:
In your neighborhood: A mailbox at the end of the driveway, or a neighbor’s house.
Outside of your neighborhood: library, community center, place of worship, or family friend’s home.
Outside of your town or city: home of a relative or family friend. Make sure everyone knows the address of the meeting place and discuss ways you would get there.
Share information. Make sure everyone carries a copy in his or her backpack, purse, or wallet. You should also post a copy in a central location in your home, such as your refrigerator or family bulletin board.
Practice your plan. Have regular household meetings to review your emergency plans, communication plans and meeting place after a disaster, and then practice, just like you would a fire drill.
To prevent potential injuries, take the time to secure your space. Secure items that might fall, fly, or slide in an earthquake. Imagine if the room was picked up and shaken up and down and side to side and then determine what items would be thrown around. Periodically review the locations where you spend time — your home, workplace, or school — to look for potential hazards and secure them.
DO A HAZARD HUNT FOR POTENTIAL HAZARDS AND THINGS THAT MIGHT FALL
NOTE: These adhesives, straps, hooks, latches, and other safety devices are available at most hardware and home improvement stores as well as online retailers.
STRENGHTEN YOUR BUILDING
Make sure your home and other buildings you spend time in are safer during earthquakes and more resistant to earthquake damage. Get professional help to assess the building’s structure and then take steps to install nonstructural solutions, including foundation bolting, cripple wall bracing, and reinforced chimneys. If you live in a mobile home, consider installing an earthquake-resistant bracing system. These measures can help reduce major damage to the building. If you are a renter, ask your landlord or property manager to make the necessary improvements to make the building safer. Examples of structures that may be more vulnerable in an earthquake are those not anchored to their foundations or having weak crawl space walls, unbraced pier-and-post foundations, or unreinforced masonry walls or foundations. Check with your local office of emergency management to ask if there are volunteer teams in your community to help with assessments.
Preparing for earthquakes involves (1) learning what people should do before, during, and after earthquakes; and (2) doing or preparing to do those things now, before the next quake.
Prepare Your Home
Make your home safer to be in during earthquakes and more resistant to earthquake damage by assessing its structure and contents. Depending on when and how it was designed and built, the structure you live in may have weaknesses that make it more vulnerable to earthquakes. Common examples include structures not anchored to their foundations or having weak crawl space walls, unbraced pier-and-post foundations, or unreinforced masonry walls or foundations.
If you own your home, find and correct any such weaknesses, yourself or with professional help. If you are a renter, ask what has been done to strengthen the property against earthquakes, and consider this information in deciding where to rent. If you are building or buying a home, make sure that it complies with the seismic provisions of your local building code.
What is in your home can be as or more dangerous and damage-prone than the structure itself. Any unsecured objects that can move, break, or fall as an earthquake shakes your home are potential safety hazards and potential property losses. Walk through each room of your home and make note of these items, paying particular attention to tall, heavy, or expensive objects such as bookcases, home electronics, appliances (including water heaters), and items hanging from walls or ceilings. Secure these items with flexible fasteners, such as nylon straps, or with closed hooks, or by relocating them away from beds and seating, to lower shelves, or to cabinets with latched doors. Ensure that plumbers have installed flexible connectors on all gas appliances.
Once the shaking stops, check for injuries among your family and neighbors and, as needed, administer first aid and call for emergency medical assistance. Also check for hazards in and around your home created by earthquake damage. Keep in mind that aftershocks may strike at any time, exacerbating these hazards and requiring you to immediately drop, cover, and hold on.
Responding promptly to hazards can prevent further damage and injuries. This may entail extinguishing small fires or reporting larger blazes; shutting off the water supply when broken pipes are leaking; shutting off the electricity when damaged wiring threatens to spark fires; shutting off the natural gas when you suspect that gas is leaking; or evacuating your home when any of these hazards or others, such as structural damage, make continued occupancy potentially unsafe.
If it is necessary to leave your home, you may, in the days and weeks following the quake, need to seek emergency assistance from the American Red Cross. In the event of a presidential disaster declaration, assistance for housing and other needs may also become available from FEMA.
Regardless of the severity of this earthquake, learn from the experience. If there are things that you could have done better in preparing for this quake, do them better now in preparation for the next earthquake. If your home must be repaired or rebuilt, for example, use this opportunity to correct any structural weaknesses and ensure compliance with seismic building standards. If unsecured belongings were damaged, improve how you secure your home’s contents. If your emergency supply kit proved inadequate, use what you learned to make a kit that will better meet your needs.
PRACTICE: Everyone should know