Posted on September 15, 2004 at 3:05 p.m. TIPS FOR PREVENTING FLOOD-RELATED ILLNESS, INJURY During widespread flooding, personal health and safety is a primary concern. The UAB School of Public Health offers the following tips for preventing disease and injury: HURRICANE-PROOF YOUR HOME Follow some common-sense safety tips to stay safe during a hurricane, says Katherine Terry, M.P.H., of UAB’s Injury Control Research Center. “Wind and rain are the major problems as a hurricane moves inland, leading to power outages, building damage and possible flooding,” she says. The UAB Injury Control Research Center offers the following safety tips: ENGINEERING HURRICANE PROTECTION TALKING TO CHILDREN ABOUT IVAN CHECK ON ELDERLY TIPS FOR DEALING WITH STRESS BEFORE AND AFTER IVAN UAB psychologist Joshua Klapow, Ph.D., offers the following tips for dealing with stress before and after Ivan: MAKING SENSE OF IT ALL A storm like Hurricane Ivan can induce severe psychological effects in persons in or near the storm’s path. The UAB Department of Psychiatry says there are ways to help cope with the fears and anxiety a storm such as Ivan can produce: Most people survive disasters without developing significant psychological problems. It is particularly important to listen to children, accept their fears and speak with them.
UAB engineers are working to develop new building materials to protect people and property from storms as powerful as Category 5 hurricanes. “Improved windstorm and related hazard-reduction measures have the potential over the next 10 years to reduce life and property losses, which will only increase if steps are not taken to help coastal communities reduce their vulnerability,” says UAB damage mitigation expert Nasim Uddin, Ph.D. One material Uddin and his team are working on is externally bonded fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) composites, which are stronger than concrete and can withstand hurricane-force winds, bullets and even explosions. Uddin is organizing an NSF-funded international workshop on disaster mitigation construction in Bangladesh, currently the world’s foremost natural disaster-prone country, in December 2005.
Jerry Aldridge, Ed.D., is a professor of early childhood education and the author and co-author of more than 100 journal articles and eight books, including “Children’s Fears of War and Terrorism: A Resource for Teachers and Parents,” (2003), which provides adults with advice on how to help children deal with their fears resulting from war at home or abroad. Aldridge is former president of the United States National Committee for the World Organization for Early Childhood Education. He teaches in the UAB School of Education’s Department of Curriculum and Instruction.
When bad weather strikes, it is important to check on the elderly in the community because aging issues like mental acuity and mobility problems could affect how older people adapt to a changed environment, according to Andrew Duxbury, M.D., a UAB geriatrician. “Because of slowed mental processes, they may not react as quickly to a dangerous situation or perhaps they are not mobile enough to get up and seek safe shelter.” Duxbury also said those elderly family members displaced from nursing homes, rehab facilities and home health environments should be okay for a couple of days if staying with family members, so long as family members are keeping an attentive eye on them and making sure they are taking all of their medications. “Watch for any obvious changes. If their condition deteriorates, contact the physician who is familiar with their care. If that person is not available, contact your own personal physician or someone in the health care system who knows you and explain the situation.”
UAB Offers Tips, Experts on Hurricane Ivan
TIPS FOR PREVENTING FLOOD-RELATED ILLNESS, INJURY