Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Friday, June 4, 2010

Fairfax is Ready thanks to MRC Volunteers! Is Your Community?


Community Emergency Preparedness Fairs

"The Fairfax Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) and the Fairfax County Health Department’s Office of Emergency Preparedness will host a community preparedness fair called Get Ready Fairfax!

The Springfield Days family festival will be held concurrently in the mall parking lot. The goal of this family friendly event is to educate the public about the role individuals and their families play in all-hazards emergency preparedness and how to get ready!

The fair is supported by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security - part of the Urban Area Security Initiative program." (http://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/mrc/getready.htm)

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Online Systems Getting Hit By Budget Cuts

According to http://az211online.blogspot.com/, "As part of the (Arizona) State’s effort to balance the 2009 budget, the Arizona 2-1-1 Program has been defunded."

This does not mean that emergency alerts are going away for this state, they will be maintained through a blog.

"Emergency Bulletins
The Arizona Division of Emergency Management is preserving the Emergency Bulletin System at http://arizonaEIN.blogspot.com/"


Things are a little different for health services where you will be referred to a non-profit agency.

"Health and Human Service Resources
The health and human service database is no longer accessible via az211.gov. There are a number of non-profit organizations in Arizona that provide Information and Referral services and may be able to assist you."

Looking for additional information at www.az211.gov, took us to the blogspot link listed above.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Volunteer Feedback

There have been several comments to the Neighbors Helping Neighbors blog recently that highlight the frustration level of some volunteers.

You need to remember you are volunteers and while you may have a desire and passion for the volunteer work you do, it is important to take a stepback and put things in perspective.

As you saw in many of the stories over the summer, the volunteers and responders in the Philippines also have a true passion for what they do.

The volunteers and government employees work hand-in-hand and often have dual roles. Everyone needs to work together for an emergency response to be effective.

These folks train in emergency response and participate in regular exercises. They are "Ready" because it is a way of life. For example, after the recent headlines in Davao, there was yet another headline today, "Bomb found near school".

According to the article, "... the bomb was probably intended for the celebration of the Kadayawan Festival last week." A festival that many of us participated in.

In early September, I will have the opportunity to meet with several local elected and appointed county executives. While I may agree with some of the views posted on the blog, they are not all necessarily my views.

It is my recommendation, that some of you take a step back, get away for a few weeks and look at things with a new set of eyes.

This has been suggested to several volunteers, with one providing the following comment, "If I were to step back; I'd probably step away at this point." To be honest, maybe it is time.

After some time away, think about what you want to do. Return to your current volunteer role or consider other alternatives?

I am not in any way saying to stop your current volunteer activities. You just need to put things in perspective, consider your family, friends, health and other activities.

There are other local volunteer organizations. For example, why not try a religious based organization, such as Reston Interfaith or an organization like the Red Cross. With the current economy, many non-profit organizations are looking for new volunteers.

Friday, May 23, 2008

Fairfax County Medical Reserve Corps Exercise In The News

May 19 , 2008
County Conducts Disaster Training
By Leslie Perales Observer Staff Writer

Employees from the Fairfax County Health Department and volunteers with the Medical Reserve Corps completed a training session on mass medical dispensing Saturday morning. The event at Buzz Aldrin Elementary School in Reston provided volunteers with realistic training to prepare them to distribute medication on a large scale during a public health emergency.

"Hopefully we'll never have to do this, but to have a structure in place, a place for volunteers to go, is just proper planning," said Mike Andrews, public safety information officer for Fairfax County.

During the training, attendees learned how to organize and run a Quick Distribution Center, which is a space where antibiotics or other medications would be provided to thousands of people in a very short time.

"What we're doing here is training the people who would be leading the QDCs and volunteers," Andrews said. "Each member has an opportunity to become familiar with each station."

The Medical Reserve Corps would respond to events such as bioterrorism or widespread epidemics, and the group of volunteers would help set up and lead QDCs. About 138 QDCs would be set up throughout the county at area elementary schools in the event of such an emergency.

Volunteers learned how to complete the medication distribution forms and verify the information on that document, as well as how to dispense the medication quickly and efficiently.

"The form is intended to be used by non-medical people," said Steve Church, senior emergency planner for the Office of Emergency Management for Fairfax County. Church said because of how the QDCs are organized, Medical Reserve Corps and other volunteers do not need medical experience.

Saturday's exercise prepared volunteers for an anthrax attack in which two types of antibiotics (doxycycline and ciprofloxacin) would be distributed. Volunteers learned that people who were not able to take those medications would be directed to the health department or their personal physician.

Because the objective of a QDC is to distribute medication as quickly as possible, volunteers are instructed not to provide any medical advice other than the requirements for taking the drugs that are being provided, Andrews said.

In the event of an emergency, the public would be notified through the media to have the head of the household walk to their nearest elementary school to pick up medications for up to 10 people, Church said. Those picking up medications would need to know the medical history of everyone for whom they are getting medications, he said. A mobile unit would serve county residents who live more than one mile from an elementary school.


Wes McDermott, emergency preparedness coordinator for the Fairfax County Health Department, led an evaluation of the training at the end of the event, and he said, "We're very pleased with the way things went." He said the health department staff and Medical Reserve Corps volunteers worked well together. "These folks are part of a growing group of pre-trained, knowledgeable community members," McDermott said.


Andrews said they hope to have about 2,000 people trained as leaders by next year, but in an actual emergency more than 10,000 additional volunteers would be needed to help at each of the medical dispensing sites. Visit www.fairfaxmrc.org or call 703-246-2433.