EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
- Earn the First Aid Merit Badge.
- Do the following:
- Discuss with your counselor these three aspects of emergency
preparedness:
- Recognition of a potential emergency situation
- Prevention of an emergency situation
- Reaction to an emergency situation
Include in your discussion the kinds of questions that are important
to ask yourself as you consider each of these.
- Make a chart that demonstrates your understanding of each of the three
aspects of emergency preparedness in requirement 2a (recognition,
prevention, and reaction) with regard to 10 of the situations listed
below. You must use situations 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5* but may choose
any other five for a total of 10 situations. Discuss this chart with
your counselor.
- Home kitchen fire*
- Home basement/storage room/garage fire*
- Explosion in the home*
- Automobile accident*
- Food-borne disease (food poisoning)*
- Fire or explosion in a public place
- Vehicle stalled in the desert
- Vehicle trapped in a blizzard
- Flash flooding in town or the country
- Mountain/backcountry accident
- Boating accident
- Gas leak in a building
- Tornado or hurricane
- Major flood
- Nuclear power plant emergency
- Avalanche (snowslide or rockslide)
- Violence in a public place
- Meet with and teach your family how to recognize, prevent, and react
to the situations on the chart you created for requirement 2b. Then meet
with your counselor and report on your family meeting, discussing their
responses.
- Show how you could safely save a person from the following:
- Touching a live electric wire.
- A room with carbon monoxide
- Clothes on fire.
- Drowning using nonswimming rescues (including accidents on ice).
- Show three ways of attracting and communicating with rescue
planes/aircraft.
- With another person, show a good way to move an injured person out of a
remote and/or rugged area, conserving the energy of rescuers while ensuring
the well-being and protection of the injured person.
- Do the following:
- Tell the things a group of Scouts should be prepared to do, the
training needed, and the safety precautions they should take for the
following emergency services:
- Crowd and traffic control
- Messenger service and communication.
- Collection and distribution services.
- Group feeding, shelter, and sanitation.
- Identify the government or community agencies that normally handle and
prepare for the emergency services listed under 6a, and explain to your
counselor how a group of Scouts could volunteer to help in the event of
these types of emergencies.
- Find out who is your community's disaster/emergency response
coordinator and learn what this person does to recognize, prevent and
respond to emergency situations in your community. Discuss this
information with your counselor and apply what you discover to the chart
you created for requirement 2b.
- Take part in an emergency service project, either a real one or a practice
drill, with a Scouting unit or a community agency.
- Do the following:
- Prepare a written plan for mobilizing your troop when needed to do
emergency service. If there is already a plan, explain it. Tell your
part in making it work.
- Take part in at least one troop mobilization. Before the exercise,
describe your part to your counselor. Afterward, conduct an
"after-action" lesson, discussing what you learned during the
exercise that required changes or adjustments to the plan.
- Prepare a personal emergency service pack for a mobilization call.
Prepare a family kit (suitcase or waterproof box) for use by your family
in case an emergency evacuation is needed. Explain the needs and uses of
the contents.
- Do ONE of the following:
- Using a safety checklist approved by your counselor, inspect your home
for potential hazards. Explain the hazards you find and how they can be
corrected.
- Review or develop a plan of escape for your family in case of fire in
your home.
- Develop an accident prevention program for five family activities
outside the home (such as taking a picnic or seeing a movie) that
includes an analysis of possible hazards, a proposed plan to correct
those hazards, and the reasons for the corrections you propose.
BSA Advancement ID#: 6
Source: Boy Scout Requirements, #33215, revised 2004
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Troop 259
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Copyright © 2006 - Boy Scout Troop 259
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