1 / 35

Being Prepared: Disaster and Crisis Planning

Sarah Daignault Executive Director, NBOA Mohonk Conference May 3, 2007. Being Prepared: Disaster and Crisis Planning. Why are you here today?. Pandemic Info. Why Plan?. Disasters and Crises are a part of human history

marrim
Télécharger la présentation

Being Prepared: Disaster and Crisis Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sarah Daignault Executive Director, NBOA Mohonk Conference May 3, 2007 Being Prepared: Disaster and Crisis Planning

  2. Why are you here today? Pandemic Info

  3. Why Plan? • Disasters and Crises are a part of human history • Planning will allow for better response, even though you can’t plan for every contingency • Planning can be adapted to fit other disaster scenarios • Once a disaster hits, there is no time to plan

  4. How Many Plans? • By type of Disaster • Fire • Flood • Pestilence • By type of Response • Evacuation of Buildings • Lockdown • Evacuation of Campus

  5. Assess the risks for your school High High Low Severity Low Likelihood

  6. NBOA Disaster Planning Experience • Institute for Advanced Financial Management held in October 2006 • 25 business officers and 9 experts worked through a pandemic flu scenario • Created outline of a disaster plan for independent schools

  7. NBOA Disaster Planning • Breakout Groups Focused on: • Business Operations and Governance • Employee Issues • Facilities • Students and Education

  8. Business Operations and Governance • Risk Management/Crisis Management Team • Enrollment Contracts • Review now, with your culture in mind • Keep it flexible • Cash Flow & Institutional Relationships • How much cash required for critical needs, and how much do you have at lowest point? • Are bank and payroll provider prepared?

  9. Business Operations and Governance • Outside Service Providers • Have they made adequate plans? • Look for backups and cooperative options. • Technology & Redundant Communications • Arrange for backup or remote web-hosting. • Arrange for remote access to your system and to bank and payroll providers. • Automated Communications to Families

  10. Business Operations and Governance • Business Continuity • Identify essential functions • Cross-train staff • List of passwords, important websites, etc. • Plan for Shutting Down Facility • Disposal of perishable goods • Maintenance issues - how to keep pipes from freezing, etc.

  11. Employee Issues • Employment Contracts • At will language • Don’t define school year - make it flexible • Leave Policies • Standard policy that allows flexibility • Return to work guidelines • Work from home guidelines

  12. Employee Issues • Ability to Continue Salaries and Benefits • Work with faculty to determine best course of action • Coordination of benefits, COBRA, etc. • Emotional/Psychological Toll • People will lose loved ones • Acknowledge losses in keeping with your school’s culture

  13. Facilities • Evacuation Plans (particularly for boarding) • How will you get students home? • If they can’t go home, where will they stay? • Proper Hygiene • Constant hand washing • Sneeze and cough etiquette • Stay home if you’re sick!!!

  14. Facilities • Stockpiling • Need1000 calories and 2 gallons of water, per person per day • Community Use of Facilities • Check with local emergency management officials - might be planning to use your school • Work with them - what are their priorities and what might your school offer?

  15. Facilities • Physical Security • Hope for the best, expect the worst • To what extent are you willing to protect your assets? • Isolation, Quarantine, Morgue • Separate those who may be sick and those who are, and plan for a place to hold the dead • If you evacuate, plan for the animals.

  16. Students and Education • Continuing education during closure • Assess ability to offer e-learning • Faculty to create 3 weeks’ worth of lessons • Effect of long-term closure (college placement, lost credits, etc.) • Communications plan to parents • Deep emergency contact list

  17. Vocabulary Lesson • Pandemic • Mutation • Reassortment • H5N1 • U and W shaped mortality curves • Social Distancing

  18. What is a Pandemic? • An epidemic (outbreak of infectious disease) that spreads across a wide geographic region or the world • According to the WHO, a pandemic exists when: • there is the emergence of a disease new to the population • the agent infects humans, causing serious illness • the agent spreads easily and sustainably among humans

  19. Recent Epidemics • AIDS • Ebola • SARS • Monkey pox • Bird flu

  20. Seasonal vs. Pandemic Flu • Seasonal influenza • Peaks December thru March in U.S. • 36,000 deaths/200,000 hospitalizations • Frail, elderly and very young – U shaped distribution • Pandemic influenza • No seasonal preference • Comes in waves, lasting a year or more • Millions of deaths

  21. Pandemic Flu History • Ten recorded over past 300 years • 10-49 years between events, with an average of 24 years between events • No predictable pattern • Three in the 20th century • 1918-20 – mutation event with markers similar to those found in birds • 1957-58 – reassortment event • 1967-68 – reassortment event

  22. Mortality Rates • 1918 Spanish Flu • 20-40 million deaths worldwide • 675,000 deaths in U.S. • 1957 Asian Flu • 1-4 million deaths worldwide • 70,000 deaths in U.S. • 1968 Hong Kong Flu • 1-4 million deaths worldwide • 34,000 deaths in U.S.

  23. Why the Concern About H5N1? • Highly lethal virus that has resisted eradication efforts (culling of birds) • Crossed species, infecting 49 animal species beyond birds, including humans • Limited human-to-human transmission has occurred • Human infections result in rapid deterioration and high mortality rates (50%, most of those healthy young adults)

  24. Similarities to 1918 Pandemic • High mortality rate • Appears to have W shaped mortality curve • Has the same protein tag • NS1 protein found in H1N1 (1918 Spanish flu) and H5N1 only ones alike out of 169 viruses • May explain the events leading to respiratory failure and death

  25. 1918 Pandemic Statistics projected onto 2007

  26. WHO Pandemic Stages • Phase 1 - Influenza virus subtype may be present in animals, risk of human infection low • Phase 2 - Influenza virus subtype may be present in animals, risk of human infection substantial • Phase 3 - Cases of human infection reported, no human-to-human transmission • Phase 4 - Small clusters of limited human-to human transmission • Phase 5 - Larger clusters of human infection • Phase 6 - Increased and sustained human infection

  27. Public Health Challenges • Short incubation period (2-17 days) • Virus can survive on surfaces for several days • People may be infectious days before symptoms are evident • Droplet infection (sneezing/coughing)

  28. Likely Government Actions • Isolation of the sick • Quarantine of the exposed • Protective sequestration • Isolating a community before illness enters • Social Distancing • Actions taken to discourage close social contact between individuals

  29. Social Distancing • No group gatherings (classes, worship services, athletic events, concerts) • Risky to use public transportation - people may defer travel or it may be cancelled • People can work alone in spaces, drive in their own cars

  30. Social Distancing • Maintain working distances of 4-6 feet • Do not share equipment (computers, telephones) • Meet by phone or video conferencing, avoid face-to-face meetings

  31. Residences Workplace/Classroom Social Density Offices Hospitals 7.8 feet Elementary Schools 16.2 feet 11.7 feet 3.9 feet http://buildingsdatabook.eren.doe.gov/docs/7.4.4.xls

  32. School Closures • Perceived risk will influence behavior • Will teachers and students show up? • What level of absenteeism will force closure? • Pulling the trigger early may help delay outbreak and diminish the overall number of cases • Issues with calling it early • Social disruption • Child care issues • Workforce issues

  33. Resources • Personal • http://www.fema.gov/plan/prepare/plan.shtm • http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/individual/index.html • http://www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu/program_citizen.htm • Institutional • http://www.fema.gov/institution/university.shtm • http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/school/index.html • http://www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu/program_school.htm

  34. www.nboa.netnboa@nboa.net (720) 564-0475

More Related