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Preparing for Emergencies
For People with Mobility
Problems
For more information, please visit the
Planning for Emergencies for Floridians with Disabilities website.
Protecting yourself and your family
when disaster strikes requires planning ahead. This
checklist will help you get started. Discuss these ideas
with your family, friends, and/or a personal care attendant.
Prepare an emergency plan and post it where everyone can see it.
Call the local emergency management
office at (321) 637-6670 or the Red Cross chapter at (321)
632-0880 for North/Central Brevard and (321) 723-7141 for South
Brevard County.
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Ask how you would be warned of
an emergency.
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Find out if help is available
for evacuation to an
emergency
shelter. Many communities ask people with a
disability to register, usually with the local fire department
or emergency management office, so help can be provided
quickly in an emergency.
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Ask your supervisor about
emergency plans at your workplace and what provisions have
been made to assist you to evacuate if needed.
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Ask your children's teachers
and caregivers about emergency plans for schools and day-care
centers.
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If you currently have a
personal care attendant obtained from an agency, check to see
if the agency has special provisions for emergencies
(including providing services at another location should an
evacuation be ordered).
Create a Plan
Because a disaster can disrupt your primary plan,
it is important to have a backup plan ready to ensure your safety.
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Meet with household members and/or your
personal care attendant to discuss what measures you might
have to take in case of fire, severe weather or other
emergencies.
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Learn what you will need to do for each type
of emergency.
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Post emergency telephone numbers near
telephones and teach your children how and when to call for
help.
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Learn what to do in case of power outages and
personal injuries. Know how to connect or start a
back-up power supply for essential medical equipment.
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If you or someone in your household uses a
wheelchair, make more than one exit from your home
wheelchair-accessible in case the primary exit is blocked.
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Arrange for a relative or neighbor to check on
you in an emergency. Also arrange for a backup person to
check on you.
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Learn how to turn off the water, gas and
electricity at main valves or switches.
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Plan and practice how to escape from your home
in an emergency.
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Consider getting a medical alert system that
will allow you to call for help if you are immobilized.
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If you live in an apartment, ask management,
in advance, where accessible exits are located.
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Learn your communities
evacuation
routes
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Pick one out-of-state and one local friend or
relative for family members to call if separated by disaster.
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Pick two meeting places: A place near your
home in case of fire, and a place outside your neighborhood in
case you cannot return home after a disaster.
Prepare a Disaster Supplies Kit
In addition to the supplies listed in the Disaster
Supplies Kit, you may need the following:
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An extra pair of eyeglasses.
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Extra hearing aid batteries.
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Extra wheelchair batteries, oxygen,
medication, catheters, food for guide or service dogs, or
other special equipment you might need.
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A list of family physicians and the relative
or friend who should be notified if you are injured, along
with a backup contact person.
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A list of the style and serial numbers of
medical devices such as pacemakers.
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Store back-up equipment, such as a manual
wheelchair, at a neighbor's home, school, or your workplace.
Have an Escape Plan
In a fire or other emergency, you may need to
evacuate on a moments notice. Be ready to get out fast.
Develop an escape plan by drawing a floor plan of
your home. Show the location of doors, windows, stairways,
ramps, elevators, large furniture, your Disaster Supplies
Kit,
fire extinguishers, first aid kits and main circuit-breaker boxes.
Indicate at least two exit routes from each room
and mark a place outside the home where family members or your
personal care attendant should meet in case of fire.
Keep your Home Hazard-Free
In a disaster, anything that can move, fall,
break, cause a fire or impede your mobility is a potential hazard.
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Repair defective electrical wiring.
Smell for leaky gas connections. If you smell gas, turn
the gas off and call a professional to repair it.
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Keep the shut-off switch for oxygen equipment
near your bed or chair, so you can get to it quickly and turn
it off, if there is a fire.
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Secure large oxygen tanks so they cannot fall
over.
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Fasten shelves securely to the wall.
Place large, heavy objects on lower shelves.
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Hang pictures and mirrors away from
beds. Bolt large pictures or mirrors to wall studs.
If You Need to Evacuate
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Shut off water, gas and electricity if
instructed to do so.
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Let others know when you left and where you
are going.
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Enact your pet
plan. Animals other than service animals are not
allowed in public shelters.
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Take your Disaster Supplies
Kit.
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Lock your home.
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Use evacuation routes specified or special
assistance provided by local officials.
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Confirm upon arrival at a shelter that it can
meet any special care needs that you may require. If
your shelter cannot, consider seeking an alternative shelter
that can meet your needs if the situation allows.
Prepare a Car Kit
Include:
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Battery-operated radio, flashlight, extra
batteries and maps.
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Blanket and first aid kit.
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Shovel.
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Tire repair kit, booster cables, pump and
flares.
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Fire extinguisher (5 lb., A-B-C type).
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Bottled water and non-perishable foods that
conform with special dietary needs such as granola bars,
raisins and cookies.
Fire Safety
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Plan two exit routes out of each room.
Use the stairways to leave the building or to get to the
"area of rescue assistance". Never use the
elevators.
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Install smoke detectors. Clean and test
smoke detectors once a month. Change batteries at least once a
year.
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Consider installing home sprinklers.
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If there is a fire, do not try to fight the
fire. Get out fast.
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Feel the bottom of the door with the palm of
your hand before opening it. If it is hot, use your
second way out.
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Do not stop for pets or possessions.
Call the fire department after you are outside.
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Never go back into a burning building.
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