Including People with Disabilities in Disaster Drills and Exercises Karin Ford, MSPS, ICEM April 14, 2016 A photo of over 40 people in the parking lot of the Des Moines International Airport. They are participating in a disaster exercise. Some are volunteers that are acting in the role of victims. Some are in their professional role as responders, fire fighters, EMS. The rest are evaluators and cooridinators for the exercise Background •IDPH has been awarded the Disability and Health Program (DHP) funding through CDC since 1996 •Focus on preventing secondary conditions in people with disabilities (PWD) •Expanded to ADA compliance and universal design •Funded for preparedness activities after 9/11 •Joined the department in 2005 My Background •20 years social work •Disability expertize •ADA expertize •Emergency response •Planner •Blended all together = accessible sheltering Picture of a man working for American Red Cross, back to the camera facing rows of cots being set up for a disaster shelter. Photo courtesy of FEMA/Patsy Lynch Grant Activities •Main focus on individual preparedness •Difficult to measure progress or success •Large scale disasters potentially could eliminate personal planning •Preparedness evolved into Whole Community Planning •Expanding the planning process to inclusive and accessible Current Grant Activities Target: Promote State participation of people with disabilities in emergency planning and exercise planning Activities: Promote the inclusion of people with disabilities and their caregivers, attendants or other key support people in emergency preparedness training and education exercises. •Participated in 2012 and 2016 Des Moines International Airport Exercise •Provided technical assistance on exercise planning, identifying participants, evaluator Des Moines International Airport •FAA requires full scale exercise for the airport to maintain its license/certification to operate, every three years •Scenario for each is a simulated passenger air plane crash A photo of a large plane on fire and three airport fire fighters putting out the fire. Purpose for Exercise •Test and evaluate the Des Moines International Airport Emergency Plan (AEP) and capabilities •Included state, county, and local emergency responders •Local hospitals and county medical examiner •Public, private entities and service providers Exercise Participants •Full Scale Exercise held on August 4th, 2012 •351 people participated – 110 actors •6 PWD participated, including developmental, mobility, low to no hearing and communication disabilities •Full Scale Exercise held on August 8, 2015 •Over 300 people participated – 152 actors •8 PWD participated, including mobility, developmental disability, mental health and low to no hearing Exercise Participants 2015 exercise • 2 Federal agencies • 2 State agencies • 2 county agencies • 8 municipal agencies • 8 hospitals • 2 public entities • 3 private entities Hotwash •Polk County Emergency Management (PCEM) hosted a hotwash after both exercises •Responders struggled with responding to the PWD/actors •Questioned if PWD would even be on a plane •Had little understanding how to communicate or assist with evacuating them from the crash site •Left power wheel chair outside during rain delay •Responders spoke to care givers, not PWD/actors •Did not secure crash site from PWD/actors Hotwash •Overhead announcements were not provided in alternate method •Low to no vision not addressed •Some responders believed PWD with power chairs would not be on a plane •Blurred response from day to day disaster to major event •Meaning, they went into “get them to the hospital” my piece is done •In large scale events, infrastructure may not be in place •The exercise provided a different way to look at response Outcomes •Had a candid discussion about PWD living independent •Importance of assistive technology and how it needs to be evacuated with the person •Ask what assistance PWD need •Responders agreed that they needed training on how to communicate more effectively with PWD •Provided recommendations for training and modifications to plans •All players need instruction on their role in the exercise Disability Experience •Better understanding of the role of emergency management •Better understanding what their personal role is in preparedness •Non-injured PWD/actors reported that transportation partners were knowledgeable, felt comfortable and safe Partnerships •PCEM has worked extensively with the DHP on inclusive disaster planning, response and recovery •PCEM also has an established partnership with LINK Associates; a greater Des Moines community based non-profit organization that provides support services to adults with developmental disabilities and their families •This partnership includes a robust accessible transportation capability which has been activated several times in the past few years for evacuation purposes for fires and flooding Possible Opportunities for Participation in a Disaster Exercise •County emergency managers and planners •Airport exercise •Academic institutions •Hospitals, care facilities •Providers •Events centers Your Role Evaluators •Observe and document performance against established capability targets and critical tasks •Evaluate and provide feedback on a designated functional area of the exercise •You are a SME in disability and hold desirable expertise to the exercise •Volunteer as an evaluators •Come to the table to solve problems Partnerships for Emergency Managers and Planners •Local, county and state public health •Area on Aging •Easter Seals •Disability councils, boards and commissions •Disability providers •Direct care providers •Local VOAD •If you don’t know where to start, contact me Contact Jon Davis, Deputy Director, PCEM Jon.Davis@polkcountyiowa.gov 515-286-2107 Questions/Comments Karin Ford, MSPS, ICEM Iowa Department of Public Health 515-242-6336 Karin.Ford@idph.iowa.gov A photo of over 50 participants of a disaster drill. They are in a air port hanger, victims are in triage for transportation. Professionals are in their role as responders. Evaluators and coordinators are playing their role in the exercise.