Authors

  1. Schmidt, Cheryl K. PhD, RN, ANC

Article Content

More than 40,000 nurses currently serve in the American Red Cross in paid or volunteer capacities, as members of disaster action teams (DATs); blood drive workers; health and safety educators; board members; task force specialists; researchers; and representatives on local, state, regional, and national Red Cross committees. 1 These nurses represent a small fraction of those who could potentially become involved at some level. (There were approximately 2,246,000 RNs and 683,000 LPNs employed in this country in 2003. 2)

 

Since September 11, 2001, AJN has published several articles describing how nurses can better prepare themselves to respond to acts of terrorism. Just two have mentioned the Red Cross and its role in disaster relief. Kennedy and colleagues suggested that nurses consider participating in Red Cross DATs, 3 which mobilize within minutes or hours of a disaster. The article noted that such participation involves taking several Red Cross courses, including standard first aid, disaster response, damage assessment, family services, shelter operations, mass care, and mental health counseling. Not mentioned, but particularly pertinent for nurses because they already possess many of the requisite skills, are the two disaster health services courses. A nurse may take just the Introduction to Disaster course, which makes her eligible to serve during local disasters, and can decide later whether to take additional courses.

  
FIGURE. Falling tree... - Click to enlarge in new windowFIGURE. Falling trees can be a major life-threatening hazard during a tornado, such as the one that struckthis house in Carbon Hill, Alabama.

Gebbie and Qureshi described core competencies that nurses need for emergency and disaster preparedness, and listed several agencies that provide information and resources. 4 The Red Cross was mentioned only as a resource for information on developing a family emergency plan. But in most disasters, the Red Cross assumes primary responsibility for providing food, clothing, and shelter for both victims and volunteer relief workers. The only nongovernmental organization mentioned in the Federal Response Plan, it's designated as the lead agency responsible for "Mass Care" (Emergency Support Function #6) and as a support agency responsible for "Information and Planning," "Health Services," and "Food" (Emergency Support Functions #5, #11, and #8, respectively). 5 Red Cross nurse volunteers are essential to fulfilling these functions.

 

Like other health care organizations, the Red Cross has felt the impact of the nursing shortage. Nurses are needed to help with relief efforts in the wake of natural and manmade disasters, including hurricanes, floods, forest fires, and earthquakes; and the current "war on terrorism" has increased the demand for nurses with appropriate response skills in all settings. Every nurse should consider obtaining at least the training needed to volunteer at the local level. Nurses who could be available to travel to a disaster site should consider enrolling in the Red Cross's Disaster Services Human Resources (DSHR) system. Potential enrollees indicate whether they have the training and skills needed to respond to a variety of disasters; those who do have their credentials are cleared in advance. When the Red Cross needs nurses with specialized skills, this information can be accessed through the DSHR system and the nurses can be assigned quickly to disaster sites anywhere in the United States. Nurses who are able and willing to travel outside of the United States can participate through the International Red Cross.

 

In the past, nurses lacking disaster training have often spontaneously volunteered their services during disasters. Though well intentioned, they have contributed to the chaos, as some who have had to organize large numbers of volunteers have attested; a few nurses have even been injured or killed because they failed to assess the safety of the disaster scene. These assessment skills are taught in the standard first-aid course required of all Red Cross Disaster Services volunteers.

 

Some nurses will already be committed to their own agencies during disasters, but that doesn't necessarily preclude participation in Red Cross relief efforts. And nurses may be able to serve their own agencies and their communities better if they've taken Red Cross disaster courses. For example, nurses who are military reservists or National Guardsmen can serve as Red Cross volunteers if their units aren't mobilized. Retired nurses, educators, and part-time or unemployed nurses can serve. The DSHR system also accommodates volunteers with disabilities to function actively on DSHR assignments, depending on the type and severity of the disability.

 

My involvement in the Red Cross has given me a variety of community service opportunities. As a child, I had often watched my mother don her white uniform, cap, and Red Cross pin as she prepared to volunteer at local blood drives. I soon followed her lead, assisting with blood drives in 1969 while still a student nurse and, beginning in 1974, teaching first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation to nursing students and members of the communities I've lived in.

 

In June 1999, I became involved in disaster services when I learned that nurses were needed to respond to the crash of American Airlines flight 1420 in Little Rock. The plane had been attempting a landing in high winds with 145 people aboard when it skidded off the airport runway and caught fire, killing 11 and injuring 80. Because I had been an Army Nurse Corps reservist for 20 years and knew how to care for patients in field environments, I was assigned to the care of civilian and government personnel working at the crash site. I monitored them for heat-related injuries (a real risk in the hot, humid Arkansas climate) and provided first aid as the need arose during the cleanup activities. A year later, I was one of 10 Red Cross volunteers providing counseling to the flight survivors and their families during a private viewing, authorized by the National Transportation Safety Board, of the burned, twisted remains of the plane.

 

Since then, I've become certified in areas such as disaster health services, shelter operations, damage assessment, family services, and mass care. When tornadoes hit central Arkansas in January 1999 and in April 2000, I served as a Red Cross nurse, assessing the health status of families living in the shelters and determining the needs of those who were hospitalized. In December 2000 severe winter storms blanketed much of Arkansas in ice, leaving some families without electricity for as long as two months. As an expert in community nursing, I answered hotline calls, directing callers from around the state to community resources for food and shelter. When the air conditioning system failed in a Little Rock high-rise building in the summer of 2001, I helped open a shelter at the state fairgrounds for the elderly and disabled residents, who had been enduring the 100[degrees]F-plus temperatures in their apartments for three days, and monitored their health status.

  
FIGURE. This Safe Ro... - Click to enlarge in new windowFIGURE. This "Safe Room" was the only part of this house left standing when the tornado ripped through this neighborhood in Alabama.

Since 2000 I've served as a camp nurse each summer for a program called Rapid Response Team Training, in which students from high schools statewide learn first aid and disaster response and leadership skills under the guidance of Red Cross staff. The students return to their schools prepared to form teams capable of responding rapidly to potential natural and manmade disasters by providing first aid while awaiting emergency personnel. The students are also taught to assess the safety of the scene before acting, so they don't become victims themselves.

 

At the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, where I teach community nursing, I incorporate disaster relief into clinical coursework whenever possible. For instance, when the 1999 tornadoes struck Arkansas, my students and I helped staff a Federal Emergency Management Agency warehouse and organized the dispensation of donated food and clothing to displaced families and relief workers. Nursing students can also gain clinical experience by teaching Red Cross health or safety courses. In my experience, students who become involved in the Red Cross tend to continue that involvement after graduation.

 

In 2002 I chaired a statewide coalition of nursing associations and organizations, including the Central Arkansas Chapter of the American Red Cross, aimed at preparing nurses throughout Arkansas to respond to bioterrorism. We developed a course on bioterrorism recognition and response that was approved by the Arkansas Nurses Association for continuing education credit and presented to nurses statewide. In July 2002 I and other Red Cross leaders from across the nation participated in a "Weapons of Mass Destruction-Terrorism Workshop" at the Clara Barton Center in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. The center was established to provide response training in collaboration with the Office of Homeland Defense and the United States military. I was also the only nurse appointed to the Arkansas Department of Health Bioterrorism Advisory Committee that year. I continue to travel statewide providing education about bioterrorism and other public health emergencies, and I always include information about the American Red Cross.

 

The Arkansas Nurses Association has formed a partnership with the Red Cross chapters in Arkansas to provide continuing education credit for nurses who enroll in Red Cross disaster courses. I encourage all nurses to register as Red Cross volunteers in their communities and to obtain disaster training. For more information, see http://www.redcross.org/services/nursing.

 

REFERENCES

 

1. American National Red Cross. Nursing. 2004. http://www.redcross.org/services/nursing/0,1082,0_327_,00.html. [Context Link]

 

2. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2003. 2003. http://www.bls.gov/oes/2003/may/oes291111.htm. [Context Link]

 

3. Kennedy S, et al. Disaster education and training are sorely needed. Am J Nurs 2001;101(11):18-9. [Context Link]

 

4. Gebbie KM, Qureshi K. Emergency and disaster preparedness: core competencies for nurses. Am J Nurs 2002;102 (1):46-51. [Context Link]

 

5. American National Red Cross. American Red Cross responsibilities under the Federal Response Plan. 2001. http://www.tallytown.com/redcross/dsp/form3013.pdf. [Context Link]