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Key Elements and Issues in AT Reuse as a Component in Emergency Management

Sara Sack, Ph.D. Assistive Technology for Kansans. Key Elements and Issues in AT Reuse as a Component in Emergency Management. National Summit on Emergency Management and Assistive Technology Reutilization February 23-24, 2010. Sharing the Experiences of One State.

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Key Elements and Issues in AT Reuse as a Component in Emergency Management

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  1. Sara Sack, Ph.D. Assistive Technology for Kansans Key Elements and Issues in AT Reuse as a Component in Emergency Management National Summit on Emergency Management and Assistive Technology Reutilization February 23-24, 2010

  2. Sharing the Experiences of One State • ATK is the Statewide AT Program for Kansas • ATK’s goal was to become a part of our state’s emergency management plan • Small N to date: Experience in responding to 7 disasters (1 Level 5 tornado, 2 Level 3 tornadoes, 1 fire, and 3 floods)

  3. Getting Prepared to Participate in Emergency Management Planning • ATK had much to contribute but wasn’t “ready” to participate • Needed to learn from the experts • Needed the experience of preparing as an organization and as an individual • Needed to conduct a program analysis to determine what we had to contribute and how we could manage these resources

  4. What Could Our Program Contribute to Disaster Planning and Response? • Knowledge about assistive technology, durable medical equipment, and disability • Direct source of equipment for shelters and individuals • Indirect source of equipment—we know who else has equipment in the state (vendors, loan closets, etc.) • Statewide presence and connections

  5. What Could Our Program Contribute to Disaster Planning and Response? — cont. • System already in place for moving equipment • Connected to the national AT/DME reutilization network to respond to large disasters

  6. What Equipment Could Our Program Provide? • What inventory would we have ready to deploy? • All categories of AT/DME collected within our reutilization program • How would we know what equipment we had at any given point in time? • Real time online equipment inventory (hosted out of state and backed up daily) • Where would the equipment be located? • At 6 AT Access Sites located across the state

  7. Equipment: Continued • How quickly could we reasonably collect the equipment? • 24 hours • What additional equipment might be available? • Network of 31 loan closets across the state. Know general categories of equipment that they have and ATK has a disaster response plan in place with them.

  8. Equipment: Continued • How could we get the equipment to the disaster site? • Use the delivery system of our Reutilization Program, coordinate with Red Cross, use commercial carriers (Over-the-road carriers, UPS, Fed Ex, etc.)

  9. How Could We Match Equipment to The Individual’s Needs? • How do others know what we have and how do we know what individuals need? • View on-line inventory or share PDF of available equipment pulled from on-line inventory • Obtain equipment needed list from SRS services, Red Cross, and other coordinating entities

  10. Matching Equipment: Continued • How can agencies share this information without violating Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)? • Reutilization program has a Business Associate Agreement with state agency and is bound by regulations and protection standards • Individual can authorize the sharing of needed information

  11. Matching Equipment: Continued • Who assumes responsibility for matching equipment and arranging for transportation? • Follow chain of command: Reutilization Coordinator, if unavailable then Program Director, management staff, AT Access Site Reutilization Coordinator from unaffected area

  12. How Do We Budget for Disaster Response? • Who pays for transportation of equipment? • No good answer • To date we have used volunteers and associated staff to transport equipment within the state • When expenses were incurred, billed as reutilization program expenses but not sustainable

  13. What Did We Learn From Responding to Seven Disasters? • What is the scope? • Will individuals be in the area or will they be scattered to various shelters, relatives, etc? • What specific equipment is needed and how do you know? • Used lists and when people were dispersed ran Public Service Announcements (PSAs) to locate persons who needed technology • What sources of equipment are nearby?

  14. What Did We Learn From Responding to Seven Disasters? — continued • Where should the equipment go? • Learned that access to the area will be controlled and that the number of entries would be limited • How can we get the equipment there? • Who will be onsite to help with reassignment of the equipment? • Who will receive and sign for the equipment?

  15. Summary • Statewide AT program and reutilization program staff have knowledge about AT/DME and disability • Reutilization programs may have access to lightly used, high quality assistive technology and DME • Programs may need assistance with inventory tracking to respond rapidly • Programs have connections within their states but would need to expand partnerships to respond in a comprehensive manner

  16. Summary: Continued • Programs currently have a plan for moving equipment but would need assistance and further development to respond rapidly • Responding to disasters beyond the state/territory boundaries presents additional challenges

  17. Questions? • Contact information: • Sara Sack, Ph.D. Senior Professor, University of Kansas Director, Assistive Technology for Kansans 2601 Gabriel Ave. Parsons, KS 67357 620-421-8367 ssack@ku.edu

  18. Response In the Real WorldGeorge Heake • National Response Framework(http://www.fema.gov/emergency/nrf/) • The National Response Framework presents the guiding principles that enable all response partners to prepare for and provide a unified national response to disasters and emergencies – from the smallest incident to the largest catastrophe. The Framework establishes a comprehensive, national, all-hazards approach to domestic incident response.

  19. Response In the Real World • Emergency Support Functions • ESF 1-TransportationESF 2-CommunicationsESF 3-Public WorksESF 4-FirefightingESF 5-Information and PlanningESF 6-Mass CareESF 7-Resource SupportESF 8-Health and MedicalESF 9-Search and Rescue

  20. Response In the Real World • Emergency Support Functions • ESF 10-Hazardous MaterialsESF 11-Food and WaterESF 12-EnergyESF 13-Military SupportESF 14-Public InformationESF 15-Volunteers and DonationsESF 16-Law EnforcementESF 17-Animal Services

  21. Response In the Real World • Where do AT, AT Reuse and other related organizations fit in? • University Centers of Excellence, DD Councils, Disability Rights Networks etc. • They must be considered as in-kind agencies and included in the National Response Framework and the Long Term Recovery Plan. • Response cannot be added onto existing responsibilities without additional funding.

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