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Conclusion No plan = Chaos

Emergency Preparedness of International Students at TCU . Heather Brown, Social Work Intern, Principal Investigator Dr. Harriet Cohen, Associate Professor of Social Work TCU. Purpose The purpose of this study is to determine how the International Students at TCU will respond in

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Conclusion No plan = Chaos

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  1. Emergency Preparedness of International Students at TCU Heather Brown, Social Work Intern, Principal Investigator Dr. Harriet Cohen, Associate Professor of Social Work TCU • Purpose • The purpose of this study is to • determine how the International • Students at TCU will respond in • emergency events that close access • to TCU campus. • Literature Review • An emergency response plan is for • those emergencies that are of such • magnitude that they disrupt and • significantly impact the ability for • organizations to function effectively. • One crisis event in US every week. • Lack of planning for displaced students • decreases recovery time. • Few universities have developed • adequate emergency plans. • Method • All participants are International • students attending TCU. • Random sample of approximately 10% • of the 500 International Student • population. • 57 students participated in anonymous • survey via survey monkey. • Developed three levels of crisis: • Level 1 – closes campus for 3-5 days. • Level 2 – closes campus for 7- 10 • days. • Level 3 – closes campus for up to 30 • days or an unknown period. • Results • 83% of students believe it is TCU’s responsibility to provide a Crisis Plan. • 75% students believe International Students would suffer in a crisis event. • 63% students rely on other International Students as their support system. • 54% students would have to return to their country in a crisis event that lasted more than ten days due to lack of resources. • 40% students live on campus. CRISIS EVENT = Hurricanes, Tornadoes, Floods, Fires, Earthquakes, Mass Murders, School Shootings, Bio-Terrorism, and Pandemics • Conclusion • No plan = Chaos • The challenges and availability of resources for International Students in a crisis situation vastly differ from those of American Students. • In an emergency, there will be hundreds of displaced International students who do not have the necessary resources or support systems to survive locally and/or the financial resources to return home. • Universities must educate themselves in order to be prepared for panic in any crisis, emergency, or disaster situation. • Universities must have a contingency plan for every level of emergency for International Students. • References • Beaton, R., Stergachis, A., Thompson, J., Osaki, C., Johnson, C., & Charvat, S. • (2007). Pandemic policy and planning considerations for universities: • findings from a tabletop excercise. Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: • Biodefense Strategy, Practice and Science5(4), 327-34. • Calhoun, A., & Laford, R. (2000). Emergency planning for university health care • facilities. New England College Health Association, 13(4),1-13. • Cowen, S. (2007). Tulane University: From recovery to renewal. Liberal • Education, 93(3),6-18. • Rada, B., & Ramiah, K. (2005). Academic public health community responds to • hurricane Katrina: A showcase of systems and partnership. Public Health • Reports, 62,688-691. • Special Thanks to Vice Chancellor Darron Turner, International Student Services, and John Singleton • Limitations • Validity – first time this survey has been • used. • Reliability subject to interpretation of • definition of emergency . • Need for more research to understand • what emergency response plan entails. • Only 10% of population surveyed. • Results not sorted by specific • countries. • Further research needed to assess • individual students needs within an • emergency situation.

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