Environmental Health Supports Emergency Response Training
Emergency situations require quick response for the recovery and safety of those affected. Response methods aren't limited to extinguishing a fire, restoring power, or cleaning up hazardous materials. Underlying factors that may instantly affect a scene or how emergency events unfold are often overlooked.
The Center for Domestic Preparedness (CDP) in Anniston, Ala., recently partnered with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, to deliver the inaugural Environmental Health Training in Emergency Response (EHTER) Introductory Level course at the CDP. The partnership will play a large role in the development of future EHTER course offerings at the CDP, which will provide DHS funding for state, local, and tribal emergency responders.
According to the CDC, environmental health practitioners have important roles and perform critical functions during emergency response. Those functions include assessing shelters, testing drinking water, determining food safety and controlling disease.
"Many factors in the environment can affect human health," said Rob Blake, chief of the Environmental Health Services Branch at the CDC. "All emergencies are local and all emergencies have an environmental component. This course increases readiness and ensures environmental health professionals are ready and have a certain level of awareness."
An additional benefit of the course is the unique insight it provides emergency response personnel. Pat Sullivan, a fire chief from Gulf Port, Miss., has been directly involved with several incidents that required a certain level of environmental knowledge to recover.
"Fire fighters normally worry about putting water on fires," said Sullivan. "Until a few years ago, we were never concerned that the water we're drinking or cooking with could be contaminated. Public health can help us plan on things we hadn't thought about, advise us about problems we're facing, and problems we may face in the next 12 hours. Then those events don't become another emergency--they become another part of the operation that needs to be addressed."
According to the CDC, there is no current national, comprehensive, standardized education and training program in emergency preparedness and response for environmental health specialists. The EHTER course moves the nation toward a uniform training program that will benefit health practitioners and emergency responders who are first on the scene.
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