Are You Prepared To Provide Valuable Disaster Medical Care?

Disasters, whether natural events like earthquakes, wildfires, and floods, or artificial crises, often overwhelm emergency services.

In 2026, with strained healthcare systems, potential supply chain disruptions, and rising extreme weather, professional medical help may be delayed for hours or days. Families, neighbors, and communities must step up. Providing basic disaster medical care isn’t about becoming a doctor; it’s about having the knowledge, supplies, and confidence to stabilize injuries, prevent infection, and save lives until help arrives. The question is: Are you ready?

Start with training

Knowledge is your most powerful tool. Enroll in free or low-cost courses, such as Stop the Bleed from the American College of Surgeons, which teaches three key actions to control severe bleeding: direct pressure, wound packing, and tourniquet application. The American Heart Association and the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) programs offer training in first aid, CPR, and disaster medical operations. These hands-on skills cover airway management, bleeding control, shock treatment, and basic triage. Practice regularly; skills fade without use. In Oregon, local fire departments or community colleges often host sessions tailored to regional risks like wildfires or earthquakes.

Build a robust first aid kit

Store it in an easy-to-grab, waterproof container at home, in your car, and at work. Essentials include:

  • Adhesive bandages, sterile gauze pads (various sizes), and medical tape
  • Antibiotic ointment, antiseptic wipes, and hydrocortisone cream
  • Roller and elastic bandages for sprains or wrapping
  • Instant cold packs, scissors, tweezers, and a digital thermometer
  • Pain relievers (ibuprofen, acetaminophen), gloves (non-latex), and a CPR face shield
  • Triangular bandages for slings, compress dressings, and a first-aid manual

Customize for your family: add a 7- to 14-day supply of prescription medications, extra glasses or hearing-aid batteries, and items for infants, older adults, or pets. Check expiration dates every six months and rotate stock. Consider advanced additions like a tourniquet, hemostatic gauze, or a portable oxygen concentrator if someone has respiratory needs. In an era of potential shortages, stock extra over-the-counter items that sell out during crises.

Develop practical knowledge and plans

Learn to recognize life-threatening conditions: uncontrolled bleeding, difficulty breathing, altered mental status, or signs of shock. Know how to improvise, clean cloths for bandages or elevation for swelling. Create a family emergency plan that includes medical information sheets: allergies, blood types, medications, and physician contacts. Practice scenarios: “What if someone has a deep cut during a power outage?” or “How do we handle dehydration after a wildfire evacuation?”

Address broader preparedness

Maintain physical fitness and hygiene to reduce the risk of injury. Build community networks, know neighbors with medical backgrounds, and share resources. During disasters, overwhelmed hospitals mean that minor injuries must be self-managed to free up resources for critical cases.

Preparation brings calm amid chaos. By investing time in training, stocking quality supplies, and planning ahead, ordinary people become capable first responders. Valuable disaster medical care starts at home, with you. Don’t wait for the next alert. Act today to protect those who matter most.

Being prepared to provide meaningful disaster medical care is less about having advanced hospital-level skills and more about readiness, adaptability, and prioritization under pressure.

As Always, Stay Vigilant and Be Prepared

You play a critical role in your preparedness. By preparing yourself for the unexpected, you will become more self-reliant and a valuable asset to your community.

 

 

 

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