| Department of Health and
Human Services
Administration on Aging
Back to Previous
Speeches
2004
Assistant
Secretary Carbonell Remarks from the National Hurricane Conference
- April 7, 2004
I am very pleased to be able to speak to such a large and important
group of representatives at this National Hurricane Conference. As Assistant
Secretary for Aging in the U.S. Administration on Aging, I am honored
to be here to strengthen the working partnerships with FEMA.
As you may know, in my former position as President and CEO of the Little Havana
Activities and Nutrition Center in Dade County area, I was there on the front
line when Hurricane Andrew devastated our area. This organization provides
daily assistance to 55,000 frail elders in the greater Miami area so you can
imagine what a major catastrophe the hurricane created.
We learned many lessons from that experience, especially that you can never
be over-prepared in coping with widespread emergencies and disaster events.
Disasters tend to have a greater impact on the elderly and persons with disabilities.
For example, in Maryland following Hurricane Isabel, the population over 60
years of age constitutes less than 12 percent of the population, but accounted
for 40 percent of the applications to FEMA for assistance.
When disaster strikes, all sorts of complexities disrupt what may already be
a fragile balancing act of keeping life together each day. Older persons lives
are rich with experience in meeting the vicissitudes of life; but when a catastrophic
event disrupts this fragile existence, the normal activities of getting groceries
and medical care and arranging caregiver schedules may become very difficult.
A disaster may limit independence and diminish quality of life very quickly.
As emergency planners, you need to be aware of some
important issues:
- About 54 million people in the United States have some kind of disability
- Nearly four million people require assistance from another person
to handle the daily activities of eating, dressing and bathing.
- More than eight million people have limited vision.
- 28 million have hearing loss
- 1.5 million are wheelchair users with an additional four million
who need a cane, walker or other mobility device.
As emergency response plans are prepared and implemented, thought
must be given to:
- Can people hear and understand warnings?
- How quickly can they evacuate their home?
- Do they need special transportation?
- Do they have special medical needs – do they have a heart condition,
high blood pressure or diabetes?
- Do they have medications, such as insulin, or assistive devices such
hearing aids and glasses?
- Are they on special diets that regulate their health problems?
- Are they worried about their pet(s)?
- Can the person with special needs cope with the stairs in high-rise
buildings, can they carry water, ice and groceries?
- Can they cope with the physical environment of a shelter, are the
bathrooms accessible?
- Can older people cope with a traditional cot? – They may not
be able to get up or down or are unable to lie flat on the cot.
For emergency response teams who are hard pressed to meet multiple
demands simultaneously and immediately, the extra time and support for
helping people with special needs are in short supply.
Power companies usually have information about special needs people
on life sustaining equipment and the aging network has information about
many homebound individuals – but there are many we don’t
know about. It is important that we work together to have voluntary registry
to include at least basic information about those who may be in jeopardy
without assistance.
To cite a good example of creative problem solving -- In the 1997 North Dakota
floods and fire, one man in a wheelchair was flooded out of his accessible
home, and was offered temporary shelter in accessible housing. It was 250 miles
away and removed him from his support network. However, volunteer organizations
were able to arrange for an accelerated cleanup and repair, and the man was
able to return to his home with a minimum of trauma and disruption to his health
and safety.
So why is the Aging Network so important to those of you who
are emergency managers?
Our nationwide system of aging services is a rich source of assistance to emergency
response teams during these trying times. Collaboration and cooperation with
the Aging Network offers terrific advantages to those of you developing state
and local plans. Involving the Aging Network in the planning process helps
assure the best possible outcomes in a bad situation and can immensely improve
the response and recovery periods.
To give you a snapshot of our Network nationwide, we have:
- A State Agency on Aging in every state;
- 655 Area Agencies on Aging;
- Over 29,000 service providers; and
- 243 Tribal Organizations
There is an Information and Referral and Assistance program in every
community – 2,000 such systems nationwide that handle over 13 million
information and assistance requests each year. The I & R program
includes an extensive client tracking system containing valuable data
on every client. It also furnishes local providers with a complete listing
of services and resources in each community – an invaluable tool
for local emergency managers. One more reason the aging network and emergency
management network must work together before, during and after any event.
To give you an example, last year in the during the power failure in
several States, the Area Agency and service provider network in the Detroit
area was able to support the efforts of emergency workers by sharing
the database information on the homebound. Emergency workers and aging
personnel were immediately able make contact with the homebound to see
if they were all right and to provide the in-home services they needed.
Our national Aging Network includes over 29,000 providers serves 7.5
million seniors annually and nearly 3 million of this group are participating
in the congregate and home delivered meal program. Our Area Agencies
and service providers have extensive databases about the senior population
and their caregivers – where they live and what they need.
Our long-term care ombudsman program serves residents of nursing homes,
board and care, and assisted living facilities. The ombudsmen, many of
whom are local volunteers, can be quickly mobilized to assist with relocation
of residents and communicate with families of those residents.
We provide in-home services to homebound elderly – important to emergency
workers because we know where these people live and what kind of care they
need.
We have thousands of senior centers across the country that operate a broad
range of services that can quickly become a focal point for community services
and information. Our nutrition programs can quickly convert into emergency
food delivery programs.
Our transportation services for older persons, already serving those with special
needs, could be critically important for transporting seniors and others with
health and mobility issues. They have vans –wheelchair accessible vehicles
and a cadre of volunteer drivers.
We also have access to a large group of volunteers who can and would be willing
to help with various assignments in an emergency. Earlier in this conference,
many of you heard John Stokesberry talk about the fine EAGLES program that
he and Mike Weston developed here in Florida. Later in this conference, you
have an opportunity to hear about Mike Weston’s experiences as the AoA
representative in Maryland Field Office during the recovery from Hurricane
Isabel
Given this very brief overview of what our Aging Network does and has
to offer, it is clear why it so important for Emergency Response Teams
to work very closely with our aging service systems through all the phases
of a disaster event –awareness, prevention, preparedness, response
and recovery. Incorporating our service provider network in your emergency
plans aids the reimbursement for services rendered in the disaster.
Our Network knows the needs of the aging population, has functioning service
delivery systems, is staffed by trained and trusted personnel and has a communication
capability that can greatly enhance and extend the work of emergency workers.
What is AoA doing to prepare the Aging Network doing to improve disaster preparedness
and response by the Aging Network?
For the past several months, AoA has been working with knowledgeable experts
from FEMA, the Red Cross, representatives from the Aging Network and two expert
consultants from here in Florida to prepare a new set of technical assistance
materials for our Aging Network. These materials encourage our Aging Network
to become proactive partners in emergency response systems. Included in the
comprehensive guidance package, which are based on an “all-hazards” approach,
are materials from FEMA, the Red Cross and the National Organization on Disability.
The technical assistance Items include:
- An overview of Emergency Management Systems;
- Adaptable tools for helping aging service providers improve emergency
preparedness and response, including information about preventing exploitation
during and after a disaster event;
- Communication strategies and materials can be converted to local
activities for telephone trees, record keeping, home and office emergency
kits and checklists;
- A statement of understanding with the American Red Cross adaptable
for local partnerships; and
- An overview of the Aging Network to inform emergency teams about
the aging services system.
This material will be available on the AoA website for all to use and
can be copied and adapted for use at the State and local level.
We have and will continue provide training and technical assistance
to States and Tribes about the use of the materials.
Some concluding thoughts to keep mind:
- The Aging Network is a substantial resource to help you in the planning
and recovery of any emergency event and our Network wants and needs
to work with you.
- We have valuable information and databases about local environments.
- If you help us maintain and restore our service provider network,
we can be powerful allies in the restoration of day-to-day living in
the community.
- While many elderly do have special needs, such as vision, hearing
and mobility problems, many can care for themselves and be of great
use in caring for others.
- We all know that a disaster can strike at any time and any place
and that the highest priority is the safety and preservation of human
life.
Disclaimer: This
text is the basis of the oral remarks of the Assistant Secretary for Aging.
It should be used with the understanding that some material may be added
or omitted.
Back
to Previous
|