Pharmacists needed for emergency response team

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JackFruitLover

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Pharmacists needed for emergency response team

he county is taking steps to ensure it’s prepared in the event of a pandemic or biological attack by recruiting volunteer nurses and pharmacists.
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Don Hayduk, Livingston County’s emergency preparedness coordinator, said the county already has 200 nurses on its Public Health Volunteer Response Team, which was established in 2006, and it is just starting to recruit pharmacists, preferably those that live and work in the area.

“The greater the pool we can build, the better we can be prepared,” Hayduk said. “Better to be prepared ahead of time, than to be in a reactive mode.”

In the event of an emergency, such as an Anthrax attack or virus outbreak, the team will issue an alert with details as to how many volunteers are needed, where they will be sent and what skills or type of people are being requested.

Those on the team are privy to special training sessions. To sign up, contact Jennifer Kramer at (517) 552-6819 or at [email protected].

The team was most recently partially activated during the recent H1N1 influenza outbreak, with several volunteers manning a phone bank and answering questions from the public.

That resource allowed health officials to focus more closely on case investigations and day-to-day operations during the outbreak.

The request for help already has Fowlerville Pharmacy owner Bob Phipps on board.
“To me, it’s very worthwhile,” Phipps said. “It’d be nice to have a group of people who could say ‘It’s OK, we have it under control,’ as opposed to ‘oh, God, what are we going to do?’”

Hayduk said future plans could include adding veterinarians and primary care physicians, although the focus now ins on recruiting pharmacists. He hopes to establish a pool of pharmacists by the fall.

Even though the county is taking steps to prepare for a potential disaster, Hayduk said preparation should start in the home.

“They have to be able to stand on their own for 72 hours in the case of an emergency,” Hayduk said.
 
I take it that involves shotguns and hollerin'?
 
I take it that involves shotguns and hollerin'?

No, WVU has a course you take. It's like 6 CE credits, too. Plus you get a cool jacket that says "WV WMD TASK FORCE".

Next time there is a class, I'll send you the info. You should come up and take the course...its good stuff.
 
I am in NYC medical response team. My role during emergencys is to go to designated point of immunization areas. The MRC also have a bunch of cool stuff such as alerts of important health news (no matter how minor it is) that health providers report from H1N1 updates to rabies. In addition, they would tell us what to look out for and how to manage it.
 
I am in NYC medical response team. My role during emergencys is to go to designated point of immunization areas. The MRC also have a bunch of cool stuff such as alerts of important health news (no matter how minor it is) that health providers report from H1N1 updates to rabies. In addition, they would tell us what to look out for and how to manage it.

do you know if there is one for the rest of NYS?
 
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