How to Become an International Disaster Volunteer

Author: Noone   Michael  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 2017

E-ISBN: 9780128045084

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780128044636

Subject: C91 Sociology;D0 Political Theory;X4 Disasters and Prevention

Keyword: 灾害及其防治,社会学,人文地理学,地理

Language: ENG

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Description

How to Become an International Disaster Volunteer discusses the immense value an experienced water systems engineer, trauma surgeon, or communications specialist could bring to a disaster stricken community, while also explaining how their professional educations do not prepare them for the logistical, psychological, and physical demands of traveling to, and functioning in, an international catastrophe with little water or electricity, limited sleep and food, a chaotic working environment, and with team members from diverse backgrounds and with different personalities.

This book provides a step-by-step guide for the entire process, including self-evaluating tactics, fitness measurements for volunteering, how to research disaster relief organizations, how to gain appropriate training and applicable experiences, the best practices during deployments, and the personal recovery process upon returning home.

Each chapter focuses on one aspect of the progression, but also includes case studies of disasters, profiles of relief organizations, and checklists for each stage.

  • Presents tactics from an emergency manager who has extensive international disaster volunteer experience
  • Includes proven strategies that will help readers stand out to organizations
  • Provides practical advice on how to prepare for chaotic disaster conditions

Chapter

Contents

About the Author

Acknowledgments

Why This Book Was Written and How to Use It

1 Is Disaster Volunteering for You? The Rewards and Demands

Five W’s and an H

Potential Benefits

Psychological Benefits

Service Obligation

Professional/Personal Development

The Professional Volunteer

Disadvantages

Are You There to Serve Yourself or Others?

Finances—Job—Family—School

Relationship Stress

Hazards

Posttraumatic Stress

Age

Conclusion

2 Finding and Choosing the Right Volunteer Organization

Start Your Research

Scheduled Volunteer Experiences

Types of Volunteer Organizations

Input From Family/Friends/Employer

Personal Readiness

Risk–Hazard Analysis

Supplies and Equipment

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Resilience and Community

3 Developing Relevant Training and Education for Deployments

Brief History of Disaster Response

Incident Management

The Planning P

ICS Summary

Recommended Training

Community Emergency Response Team (20–80Hours)

CPR/First Aid/Emergency Medical Responder/Emergency Medical or Ambulance Technician (4–200Hours)

HAM (20–40Hours)

Food Prep/Shelter Management (1–20Hours)

Waste Management

Water Sanitation

4 Preparation and Practice

Preparing and Practicing for Your First Deployment

Traveling

Hiking

Camping

Personal Protective Equipment

Luggage

Tents and Mosquito Protection

Some Notes on Snivel Gear

Financial and Personal Implications

Summing Up

5 Predeployment Preparations

Introduction

Physical Fitness

International Travel

Insurance, Documents, Phone, Medical Concerns

Medical Issues

Licenses and Certifications

Small Group Operations and Volunteering

Leadership and Management

6 Psychological Readiness

Mental Resiliency—Anticipate, Plan, Deter

Step One: ANTICIPATE

Step 2: PLAN—Create Your Anticipate, Plan, Deter Personal Coping Plan

Step 3: DETER

Health and Well-Being Unit Leader

Conclusion

7 On Deployment I: Setup, Operations, and Self-Care

The Call … and the Tactical Pause

Team Building

Advance Team

Housing, Unpacking, Escape Route, and Rally Plan

Communications

8 On Deployment II: Continued Operations, Winding Down, and Getting Back to the “Real World”

Transportation and Recordkeeping

Self-Care

Psychological

Physical

Building Relationships With Your Local Partners

Packing Up, Lessons Learned, Leaving Stuff

9 Postdeployment

Coming Home

Back Cover

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