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States Adjust Disaster Plans for Elders
Most Katrina fatalities were people over age 50
By Christine Vestal,
Stateline.org Staff Writer
Nov. 23, 2005 - In the hurricane zone and beyond,
state aging departments and emergency responders are drawing a lesson
from storm death tolls and are updating their disaster plans to make
special arrangements for the elderly.
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Voice of America
Senate Seeks Plan to Evacuate Elderly in Disaster
Hearing by Senate Special Committee on Aging
By Susan Logue, Voice of America, Washington
Oct. 12, 2005 - More than a dozen nursing homes in
Louisiana are being investigated for their treatment of patients during
Hurricane Katrina. Dozens died, abandoned in the storm. Calling the abandonment of the elderly "the most
disgraceful" tragedy to occur as a result of Katrina, Republican Senator
Gordon Smith called a hearing of the Special Committee on Aging to
prevent it from happening again.
Read more...
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More than half of Hurricane Katrina’s 1,000-plus
fatalities were over age 50, including 34 elderly residents who died
when the owners of a Louisiana nursing home allegedly abandoned them.
Twenty-four seniors died in a bus fire outside of Dallas as they were
being evacuated from Hurricane Rita. Countless other seniors were
stranded in nursing homes, hospitals and private homes with no way to
contact their relatives or call for help.
A major goal of the post-hurricane effort is to
improve state and local databases of at-risk seniors and ensure that
nursing homes, hospitals and other group-living facilities are prepared
to safely evacuate residents.
Advocates for the elderly are putting the issue
before state legislatures, and Congress has called on experts to explain
what went wrong and what went right during this summer’s catastrophic
storms.
AARP is holding a meeting Dec. 1 in Washington,
D.C., that will cover state and local preparations for a full range of
disasters, including tornados, earthquakes, flash floods, tsunamis,
mudslides, forest fires, heat waves, power outages, snow and ice storms,
pandemics and terrorist attacks. The meeting will assemble state and
local responders to discuss best practices for protecting seniors during
disasters.
Even Florida—considered a bellwether for both
emergency preparedness and elder care—is under attack for its disaster
recovery efforts after Hurricane Wilma. The storm, which left thousands
of Floridians homeless and more than 2 million without power and water
for weeks, was especially hard on seniors because it cut a swath across
a section of south Florida that is densely populated by the aged.
“Hurricanes are the easiest kind of disaster to
deal with, because you get lots of warning,” said AARP’s top public
policy executive, John Rother. Even so, many elders were left stranded.
“The more you look at the response to Katrina, the
more problems you see. No one knew where the seniors lived. There was no
system to track family members and doctors. The state lacked adequate
transportation. … There were no special needs shelters and no way to
provide continuous medical care, such as generators for ventilators. On
top of that, communication systems went down so seniors couldn’t call
for help,” Rother said.
AARP and other advocates for the elderly, including
several Florida legislators, want the state to require nursing home
operators to follow prescribed evacuation procedures when a disaster is
declared. They also want licensed home health-care providers to register
their elderly patients for disaster assistance.
Skeptics question whether state legislative and
policy fixes really will make a difference next time a catastrophe
occurs. They argue that without additional funding and personnel, state
and local responders are likely to become overwhelmed by major disasters
as they have in the past and seniors will once again slip through the
cracks.
But AARP policy director Dalmer Hoskins says states
can make changes that will significantly improve seniors’ chances for
survival in a disaster, without making major new revenue commitments.
“Some of the best things that have happened for
seniors have happened at the local level,” Hoskins said. “The community
really does work to make sure that older people don’t fall victim.
There’s a community-based experience that goes back hundreds of years,”
he said.
Florida was criticized for not knowing where all of
its seniors lived. Yet the state has one of the most sophisticated elder
registries in the country. When a hurricane approaches, state disaster
recovery experts are able to accurately estimate the number of at-risk
seniors in its path and prepare accordingly.
Wilma proved that the system needs improvement.
Bentley Lipscomb, AARP’s state director, said
Florida should conduct outreach campaigns to ensure that every senior
citizen who may need assistance is on the list, because many elders who
live independently are not aware the registry exists.
While nursing homes and other group-living
facilities can be mapped, it’s much more difficult to locate
single-family residences where frail elders may need assistance.
Complicating the situation is an effort by states
in the last several years to keep seniors out of costly group-living
facilities. Elderly people who can take care of their daily needs are
generally happier living on their own, but they are often ill-prepared
to cope with a disaster, Lipscomb said.
Maria Greene, Georgia’s director of aging service,
said that for the first time in many years, the aging department called
a statewide meeting to coordinate efforts between local aging offices
and first responders to ensure that elders are registered and accounted
for.
“In some counties the list is electronic; in others
it’s handwritten,” she said. But when local fire and police officials
work with local aging-service providers, the system works, she said.
Most states require written consent from seniors or
family members before sending emergency crews to their homes to evacuate
them, and some require a doctor’s letter. Streamlining these rules could
make a big difference in the states’ ability to track vulnerable elders,
AARP’s Lipscomb said.
Under federal law, nursing homes are required to
have evacuation and disaster recovery plans, but it is up to states to
ensure that the plans work.
“States should set detailed requirements for
nursing-home evacuations,” says Dr. Robert Butler of the International
Longevity Center, a New York-based elder advocacy group. “And in states
that already have requirements, state officials should review those
plans and make sure that nursing home personnel know what to do.”
Butler’s organization developed a set of
guidelines on emergency preparedness for older people after the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. “We were horrified to find that
(near) ground zero, many older people were left without services—no
prescriptions, no meals. They were left alone for days. It appeared that
animals were rescued faster than elders. Older people are, in a sense,
invisible,” he said.
In many cases, states have well-laid disaster
recovery plans, but responders don’t practice them and local agencies
and service providers fail to follow prescribed procedures.
For example, New York law authorizes counties to
keep an inventory of the elderly and others who may need help in a
disaster. But according to New York state Sen. Michael Balboni ®, “They
are not doing it. We need to find a way to get them to do it.”
“Convenience, complacency and forgetfulness are the
biggest enemies we have to fear. How do you keep reminding people
without scaring them?” Balboni asked in a telephone interview.
Another problem for state emergency planners is
that they are forced to spend too much time planning for terrorist
attacks because most federal emergency funding has been aimed at
terrorism since Sept. 11. Legislators in several states want emergency
planners to put more resources into preparing for natural disasters,
which are much more frequent.
Balboni says too little money is coming from the
state and local level. “You get what you pay for. We need to make local
jurisdictions pony up.” He suggested that states offer matching funds
for local emergency response efforts.
Balboni serves on the National Conference of State
Legislatures’ disaster planning committee, which is to meet Dec. 6 in
Chicago to come up with guidelines for improving state and local
emergency policies. Other issues under review are adequate
transportation, specialized shelters and better tracking of elders’
medical record and emergency contacts.
A major goal is to find better ways to tell people
how to take care of themselves and their loved ones without scaring
them, Balboni said. “When it comes to the elderly, their children are
our target audience.”
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