




















Are You Ready. . .to Get More Information?
- Learn how to apply for the National Nurses Response
Team.
- Visit the American Public Health Association Web
site, to get information on public health preparedness for
emerging threats, including anthrax, bioterrorism, smallpox
and SARS.
- Learn more about national disaster and emergency preparedness
on the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's site.
- Get the details on St. Louis University School of Nursing's
Online Disaster Preparedness for Nurses Certificate Program.
- Explore the St. Louis University Center for the Study of Bioterrorism
and Emerging Infections Web
site to find fact sheets, case studies, training and education
resources, articles and much more.
- Find your local Red Cross chapter at the American Red Cross
site.
- Learn how to organize a Medical Reserve Corps unit in your
community, here.
- Find out about distance-learning bioterrorism preparedness
courses offered through the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's Public Health Training Network
(PHTN).
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Ready for Anything
While no one wants to imagine that another 9/11 or a bioterrorism
attack could happen, the reality is that nurses and communities must
be prepared to respond to such threats. Nurses of color can play a crucial
leadership role in bringing culturally competent terrorism preparedness
to America's diverse communities.
By Barbara Marquand
In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks and the anthrax scare
of fall 2001, American nurses can no longer observe a troubled world
and reassure themselves that terrorism won't happen here. But they can
be prepared to respond if terrorists strike again.
The nation is counting on nurses to play a vital role in responding
to any future terrorism disasters that may occur. Specifically, nurses
will be needed to work on the front lines to treat victims, educate
other medical professionals, teach communities about emergency preparedness
and help people cope in the aftermath of attacks.
Nurses are a natural choice for this role because they consistently
rank among the nation's most trusted professionals-a key benefit as
they work to prepare communities for eventualities that most Americans
find terrifying. And because "dirty bombs," chemical weapons
and anthrax spores don't discriminate on the basis of skin color or
ethnicity, minority nurses who can provide culturally and linguistically
competent public health preparedness to diverse communities will be
urgently needed.
"Hospitals must assign leaders to help them prepare for terrorist
disasters," says Greg Evans, PhD, MPH, director of the Center for
the Study of Bioterrorism and Emerging Infections at the St. Louis University
School of Public Health. "Nurses, rather than doctors, are the
ones to fill those important leadership roles." To do so, he adds,
nurses will need training in disaster preparedness, bioterrorism and
leadership skills.
To meet that need, the federal government, nursing associations, schools
of nursing and health care systems are all working to train, educate
and organize nurses to respond to terrorism, as well as other potential
public health emergencies, such as the recent Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) epidemic. Government officials and nursing leaders are
encouraging nurses who want to help after catastrophes to join organized
efforts so they can get the proper training and be part of systematic
responses.
In June 2002, President Bush signed into law the Public Health Security
and Bioterrorism Response Act, which authorized significant funding
improvements in public health infrastructure and emergency health preparedness.
Currently, several major national initiatives are under way, giving
nurses a variety of different channels through which they can serve.
The National Nurses Response Team
The American Nurses Association (ANA) and the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services' Office of Emergency Response are establishing the
National Nurses Response Team, a force of registered nurses trained
to respond to a major bioterrorism event, such as the release of smallpox
or anthrax. The nurses would be responsible for providing mass vaccinations
or chemoprophylaxis to hundreds of thousands of Americans, or even millions.
The association and federal officials want to recruit 10 regional teams
of 200 nurses, says ANA senior policy analyst Cheryl Peterson, RN, MSN.
In case of a terrorism disaster, the federal government would deploy
nurses on the team for no more than two weeks at a time and would pay
them for their service.
Racial and cultural diversity in the response team will be critical,
as it is in all areas of nursing, Peterson stresses. The team must be
able to communicate medical information and educate the public quickly
after a crisis. Nurses of color can play a key role in helping other
members of the team understand diverse cultures, establishing trust
in minority communities, responding to individual and community needs
with cultural sensitivity and communicating with limited-English-speaking
populations.
According to Peterson, public health experts were already studying
how to better inform nurses about bioterrorism even before 9/11. After
a religious cult released sarin, a nerve gas, in a Tokyo subway in 1995,
an American College of Emergency Physicians task force studied whether
health care providers were ready to respond to such a disaster here.
The answer was no, Peterson says. That revelation, along with the attacks
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon and the subsequent anthrax incidents,
served as an alarming wakeup call.
Nurses who join the National Nurses Response Team will be trained through
national online courses and regional continuing education programs.
Peterson says officials hope to have the team in place by the end of
this year.
Serve Nationally, Locally or Both
Although the National Nurses Response Team is a particularly exciting
initiative because it focuses exclusively on nurses, it is not the only
option available to nursing professionals who want to make a difference
in helping their country prepare for and respond to the threat of terrorism.
Here are several other programs in which nurses can make valuable contributions:
- Disaster Medical Assistance Teams. A Disaster Medical Assistance
Team (DMAT) is a group of medical personnel who work on the front
lines providing medical care after a disaster. This can include natural
and environmental disasters as well as terrorist attacks.
The teams, which are part of the federal government's National
Disaster Medical System, are deployed to disaster sites with enough
equipment and supplies for 72 hours. They help triage victims and
prepare patients for evacuation. They can also help relieve local
health care staffs that become over-loaded during a crisis. The
team members are paid by the federal government while serving, and
their medical or nursing licenses are recognized in every state
during their service.
- Medical Reserve Corps. These groups are part of the USA Freedom
Corps, an initiative developed after President Bush's 2002 State of
the Union address called for establishing a new program to give Americans
the opportunity to volunteer and serve their communities. After September
11, many people across the country felt a renewed surge of civic duty
but weren't sure how or where they could help.
Although the federal government helps fund the Medical Reserve
Corps through grants, the groups are actually developed and run
by individual communities so they can design the corps to respond
to local needs. According to Craig Stevens, a spokesman for the
U.S. Surgeon General's office, any organization or group can start
a Medical Reserve Corps, and volunteers don't necessarily have to
be health care professionals to take part. So far hospitals, churches,
Rotary Clubs, fire departments and even a community newspaper have
launched these volunteer efforts in 42 communities nationwide.
Not only can local Medical Reserve Corps groups be organized to
respond to disasters, they can also serve ongoing public health
needs, says Stevens. For example, they may provide health education
or develop vaccine programs. Nurses obviously can play a huge role
in establishing Medical Reserve Corps units, he adds. And because
these programs are so strongly community-focused, they can be a
particularly effective way for minority nurses to establish culturally
competent emergency preparedness efforts in communities of color.
- American Red Cross. Registered nurses can join their local Red Cross
chapters to get training and local experience in terrorism preparedness.
They can also receive additional training to respond to disasters
outside their communities. The length of assignment depends on the
type and location of the disaster. Nurses who serve away from their
local areas should be able to commit to at least two weeks deployment.
Nurses can serve in a variety of ways through the Red Cross.
They can provide community disaster education, recruit and train
other nurses, work at Red Cross service centers and provide health
assessments and first aid for Red Cross workers responding to disasters.
- Commissioned Corps Readiness Force. Nurses who work in the U.S.
Public Health Service's Commissioned Corps can volunteer for the Readiness
Force, which deploys teams to respond to major public health emergencies.
Since 9/11 and the anthrax attacks, the Commissioned Corps Readiness
Force has placed increased emphasis on terrorism preparedness training
for its volunteers.
Learning from the Experts
Before September 11, courses on terrorism and bioterrorism response
were not exactly a staple of most nursing school curricula. Today, of
course, it's a different story, with a growing number of academic institutions
incorporating this urgent new subject into their nursing programs.
One of the most unique efforts is under way at St. Louis University
School of Nursing, which launched a first-of-its-kind online disaster
preparedness certificate program in February.
The idea for the program came out of a faculty meeting when professors
asked one another, "If we have another 9/11, what are we supposed
to do?" recalls assistant professor of nursing Dotti James, RN,
PhD.
When nursing school alumna Elsie Roth, RN, MA, BSN, heard about the
plan, she suggested that faculty members travel across the world to
learn from the experts: Israelis. "Who would know how to respond
to terrorism better than them?" she says. Adds James, "In
Israel, they're living with this constantly and take a very pragmatic
approach: Get ready for it."
Roth, a public health nurse who has traveled to Israel many times,
volunteered to lead the expedition. As a lifetime member of Hadassah,
a women's organization supporting the Hadassah hospitals in Israel,
she worked with her Israeli contacts to set up an in-depth learning
program for the St. Louis University faculty at the Henrietta Szold
Hadassah Hebrew University School of Nursing and Hadassah Hospitals
in Jerusalem. Roth and four faculty members representing the School
of Nursing and the School of Public Health spent an intense week learning
from local military and public health officials, volunteers and emergency
room doctors and nurses.
James says the experience was profound. They learned the technical
and systematic methods the Israelis use to respond efficiently to terrorist
incidents, and they witnessed the impacts of terrorism on the day-to-day
lives of residents and hospital personnel. They watched as health care
workers trained new mothers how to put gas masks on their infants.
"The big thing we learned is it can happen here," James emphasizes.
"People are going to turn to us as nurses, and that's not the time
to say, 'I don't know what to do.'"
The certificate program requires six core courses plus four courses
selected from a menu of 12 electives. The electives include such topics
as biological terrorism, social and psychological impacts of disasters,
basic epidemiology, and the unique needs of vulnerable populations (such
as children, the elderly, people who are incarcerated, people who live
in high-rise buildings and immigrants who don't speak English).
"The Whole Issue Is Education"
In addition to the ANA, other nursing professional associations are
also responding to the need to prepare nurses to deal with the threat
of terrorism. For example, the National Black Nurses Association is
offering a full-day Red Cross Disaster Training session at its upcoming
2003 Annual Conference in New Orleans.
The Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses is adopting a position statement
calling for education for nurses on bioterrorism agents, signs and symptoms
of exposure to such agents, treatment plans, containment and self-protection.
"The whole issue is education, education, education," says
academy president Doris Greggs-McQuilkin, RN, MA, BSN, the first African-American
nurse to lead the national organization. The academy is also incorporating
a new chapter on disaster planning and bioterrorism into its core curriculum.
Earlier this year, the American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing
held a special workshop on "Preparing the Nursing Workforce for
Bioterrorism" at its recently completed 2003 Annual Conference.
"We felt all of our nurses needed to be aware of the risk,"
says the academy's president, Catherine Futch, RN, MN, CNAA, CHE, CHC.
The threat of a bioterrorist attack is so frightening that most people
would rather not think about it. But the best way to reduce the public's
fear is to educate them about the challenges and how to respond, Futch
asserts. In this context, nurses' ability to understand other cultures,
communicate with diverse populations and provide linguistically competent
public health education will be more important than ever, she adds.
Health care systems are still another group that is beginning to address
the issue of terrorism response. And they, too, are aware that preparedness
information must be easily accessible to patients of all races and ethnicities.
For example, after the anthrax scare, Kaiser Permanente, the nation's
largest HMO, made sure it had patient education materials about anthrax
available in various different languages.
Gayle Tang, RN, MSN, Kaiser's national director of multicultural services,
believes that planning how to provide culturally and linguistically
competent medical care in response to terrorism will be a key issue.
The big question, says Tang, who is Chinese American, is: How do we
reach all the diverse populations, especially those who don't speak
English? By arming themselves with a strong base of education, knowledge
and skills in terrorism preparedness and response, minority nurses can
be indispensable leaders in efforts to answer that question.
Barbara Marquand is a free-lance writer in Reno, Nev., who specializes
in career and business topics.
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