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What You Can Do To Be Prepared
 

No matter what kind of emergency may occur – a natural disaster or a terrorist event – all Kentucky residents need to take steps NOW to prepare themselves and their families for any type of emergency. 
Ask yourself: If water, gas, electricity and phone service were cut off today (recall recent ice storms and tornados) – are you ready to respond? 
Disaster strikes without warning.  It can force you to evacuate your residence – or confine you to staying inside.
This is why experts cannot emphasize enough the importance of having a plan.  Familiarize yourself and your family with the emergency plans of the areas in which you live and work – and with your children’s school emergency procedures.  Know your hospitals and plan ahead how you and your family members will get home if area transportation systems or routes are shut down.

A Family Emergency Plan
• Contact your local public health and emergency management offices for information on the types of disasters that might occur in your area – and how to prepare for them.  Ask, too, about their emergency plans and how they will be implemented if needed.
• Know the Homeland Security Advisory System and risk levels:
  Green – Low
  Blue – Guarded
  Yellow – Elevated
  Orange – High
  Red – Severe

Go to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Web site at http://www.ready.gov for excellent information about emergency plans.
• The American Red Cross has guidelines on how to respond to emergencies.  Details are accessible by calling your local Red Cross Chapter or online at http://www.redcross.org.
 
At a minimum:
• Write out a family emergency plan that includes basic information on how you and your family can protect yourselves during a public health emergency.  Review and update when needed. For a template of a family emergency plan, click on the Family Disaster Plan Checklist.
• Develop an emergency communication plan in case family members are separated during a disaster.  Separation is a real possibility during the day when children are at school and parents are at work. Know your school’s plan to protect your child and communicate with you in an emergency. 

 Decide where children will go if parents can’t get home.
• Prepare a list of contact information for each family member.  Include:
      -Hospitals close to home, school or work
      -Family physicians and dentists
      -Local and out-of-town emergency contacts
      -Local Public Health Department 
      -Poison Control Center
      -American Red Cross
• Ask your employer if there is an emergency plan for your workplace and incorporate it into your personal plan.
• Identify a local contact person and an out-of-town contact person – consider an out-of-state contact person as it may be easier to call out of state during an emergency than in the local area, especially if phone systems are overloaded.  Your contact person should be a friend or relative that all family members can call if separated. This allows each family member to check in for news of the others. Click on the Family Emergency Phone Numbers.
• Plan how you can “shelter in place” should there be contaminated air outside. Choose an interior room or one with as few doors and windows as possible. If you see debris in the air or learn from authorities that the air is contaminated, bring family and pets inside, lock doors, close windows, air vents and fireplace dampers.  Immediately turn off all air conditioning, forced air heating systems, exhaust fans and clothes dryers.  Seal windows, doors and vents with plastic sheeting and duct tape.  Watch TV, listen to the radio or check the Internet for instructions.
• Become familiar with evacuation/escape routes in your community.  However, during an incident, stay where you are unless directed by authorities to evacuate. 
• Identify a location outside your neighborhood where your family can meet if your home is affected or the area is evacuated.
• Gather health information on each family member – include immunization history, blood type, allergies, current medication, past and current medical conditions and the ages and weights of children.
• Develop a plan for pets and service animals. Pets may not be admitted to public shelters.
• Have a “get away” plan with alternative routes.  If you have a car, keep half a tank of gas in it at all times.  If you do not have a car, plan how you will leave if you have to.  When you leave, take your emergency supply kit and lock the door behind you.  If you think the air is contaminated, drive with windows and vents closed, the air conditioner and heater turned off.  Listen to the radio for instructions.
• Meet with neighbors to discuss disaster preparedness – find out who has special skills and who have special needs such as the elderly or the disabled. Talk to one another about how you can work together. 

Emergency Supply Kit



Franklin County Health Department recommends that families have a disaster supply kit in place for any emergency – a tornado or flood or any other risk to health and safety. 
• A three-day supply of food and water (one gallon per day per person).  Include canned and dried foods that are easy to store and prepare
• Clothing, blankets and sleeping bags
• Battery-powered radio and flashlight with extra batteries
• A First-Aid kit
• Candles and matches
• Sanitation supplies, including iodine tablets and bleach to disinfect water
• Potassium iodide to protect against radiation poisoning
• Toilet articles and special needs items for infants, older adults or disabled family members
• Extra sets of car keys and eyeglasses
• If you have a car, try to keep at least 1/2 tank of gas in it at all times.
• Cash and traveler’s checks – cash is most important in case ATMs are shut off
• Important family documents in a waterproof container
• Chemical and hazardous materials disasters can send tiny microscopic “junk” into the air so think about creating a barrier between yourself and any contamination.  Consider having something for every family member that covers the mouth and nose.  
• Duct tape and heavyweight garbage bags or plastic sheeting that can be used to seal windows and doors against potential contamination outside.
• KEEP A SMALLER EMERGENCY SUPPLY KIT IN YOUR CAR

 

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100 Glenns Creek Road Frankfort, KY. 40601 Tel: (502) 564-4269
 
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