Category: Safety

Anchorage airman dies of H1N1 complications near Arizona base

This is the kind of things we need to watch for. I’m not saying that there’s any reason for alarm, because there isn’t – yet. But, as more and more healthy people succumb to the Novel H1N1 (Swine) flu, the greater the chances that the virus is mutating. Right now, we just need to keep watch on this.

Anchorage airman dies of H1N1 complications near Arizona base

An airman from Anchorage has died of swine flu complications in Arizona, where he was stationed.

Staff Sgt. Shawn Rankin, 25, died early Oct. 4, according to Justin Oakes, spokesman for Luke Air Force Base. The base, home to the 56th Fighter Wing, is near Phoenix.

The Friday before, Rankin didn’t go to work; he apparently called in sick, Oakes said. Rankin lived off base in Glendale, Ariz. Early in the morning of Oct. 4, someone at his apartment called 911 because he wasn’t responding. Medics couldn’t revive him and he was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

Preliminary autopsy results from the Maricopa County medical examiner found that he died of complications from an H1N1 infection, the Air Force said in a statement Friday.

— Join the discussion on this on the forum: http://thepreparednesspodcast.com/viewtopic.php?f=38&t=452

Rob Hanus

Report on handling H1N1 cases: Use masks with airtight seals – CNN.com

Report on handling H1N1 cases: Use masks with airtight seals – CNN.com

Report on handling H1N1 cases: Use masks with airtight seals
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Panel recommends health care workers wear N95 respirators for H1N1 patients
N95 respirators form an airtight seal around the nose and mouth
They filter out at least 95 percent of particles as small as 0.3 micrometers
Report says it is not known to what extent flu viruses spread through the air
updated 4 hours, 51 minutes ago
Next Article in Health »

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) — An advisory panel is recommending a major step up in protection for health workers dealing with patients suspected or confirmed to have H1N1 influenza.

One expert says that based on cur”

(Ed. Note: N95 are cheaper than N100 masks, but they don’t work as well. An N95 will filter out 95%, while the N100 will filter out 99.99%. If you’re trying prevent from breathing in a virulent bug, which would you rather be using? Also, the masks with filters will provide protection much longer than those without valves.)

Pandemic Swine Flu on The Preparedness Podcast

Just finished uploading episode #19 which covers Pandemic Flu.  It’s the scoop on the real info about pandemic flu and what you can do to prepare for them.

Podcast Feeds (use whichever is more convenient):

Below are the show notes:

Unless you have been living under rock, you have no doubt heard about the Swine Flu.  This show is going to be all about Pandemic Flu, and Swine Influenza A H1N1.  There is a lot of bad information being passed around, so we’re going to address the facts and realities of Pandemic Flu.

Facts and status of the flu as of 4-29-2009.

  • 91 laboratory confirmed human cases in US
  • 1 confirmed death in the US
  • More than 160 deaths in Mexico (not all have been 100% confirmed, but that’s Mexico for you).
  • Pandemic Alert Level 5
  • This is a new virus – no one has seen it before and no one has any immunity to it.

 

Really Good FAQ on Swine Flu:

http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu/swineflu_you.htm

 

Flu Transmission Simulation:

http://www.lanl.gov/news/images/avianflu.shtml

 

How does this flu compare to other pandemic flu?

- Swine flu of 1976

- Spanish Flu of 1918-1919

 

Spanish Flu Facts:

http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/world/spanish%20flu%20facts/111285

 

Some Pandemic Flu sites:

http://www.lanl.gov/news/images/avianflu.shtml

http://cdc.gov/swineflu/

 

Build your own safe room fan filter:

http://www.alpharubicon.com/basicnbc/safefanwar.htm

http://www.alpharubicon.com/basicnbc/faninacanmods.htm

 

Mask Model Numbers:

N95 – 3M 8211

N100 – 3M 8233

 

Use Calcium Hypochlorite to Disinfect Water

http://www.survivaltopics.com/survival/better-than-bleach-use-calcium-hypochlorite-to-disinfect-water/

 

Reputable places that sell masks online:

http://www.buyemp.com/

http://www.envirosafetyproducts.com/

 

Topics of discussion

  • Is this serious? What’s the big deal about this flu when it hasn’t killed anywhere near as many as seasonal flu?
  • It might not be bad now, but the worry is that it could mutate so.
  • Prevention, isolation, quarantine
  • What masks and other PPE? N95 vs N100?
  • How long do the masks last?
  • Reusing masks?
  • Mask vents
  • Cost of PPE compared to other insurance policies
  • Be prepared for quarantined, or partial quarantine (like a school closing)
  • What to store?
  • How long to store food (etc.) for (maybe several waves of a pandemic flu)
  • Vaccines?
  • Decon stuff

FIRE ALARM!

About 10 minutes ago, all the smoke detectors went off in my house. Luckily, there was no fire, nor even smoke, but there was plenty of adrenaline.

My house is wired with the type of detectors that are powered by grid power (and batteries) and when one goes off, they all go off. Let me tell you, one fire alarm is loud, many fire alarms is deafening.  My ears are still ringing, literally.

The trigger point was the detector in my home office, which I was currently in when it went off. I haven’t determined what set off the alarm yet, though I suspect it might be a small bug crawling around inside.

When the first alarm went off, I wasn’t sure what it was.  It took about 2 seconds to realize that it was the fire alarm. Looking back, that first beep or two may have been the UPS that I have in the office that protects the computer equipment. If it was, then the house may have been hit with a surge, though I don’t know if that can cause a false alarm.  Also, if the first beeps were the UPS, that would explain why I didn’t immediately recognize the beeping as a smoke detector.

Once I realized that it was the fire alarms, I first checked the room I was in, then, finding nothing, I ran out of the office to the next room, turning on all the lights looking for smoke. I had two things in mind, check on the kids and find the fire so I knew which escape routes were blocked. When I checked one of my children’s rooms, one of the things that I made sure of was that they were in their bed. I wanted to make sure I know where everyone was at.

Being a light sleeper, my wife was up immediately. Finding no smoke, I decided to run downstairs to see if I could find the source, as I couldn’t see or smell any smoke at all. As I ran down the stairs, I shouted instructions to my wife, like keep checking for smoke and fire and turn on all the lights. I didn’t have to tell her to keep an eye on the kids, as I knew that would be her #1 priority.

In about 15-20 seconds, I had all of the downstairs rooms checked and was down-right perplexed. I’ve never been in a fire (thank God), but assumed that when the alarms went off, it would be obvious as to why. This was not obvious. 

Luckily, this was a false alarm, but it gave me some insight.  Here’s what I learned (not in any order):

  1. My kids are really sound sleepers. I am no longer going to worry about having the TV too loud or talking around them when they’re sleeping. All three of them slept right through it. 
  2. I wasted time turning on lights. I could check a room faster than I could find the light switch, which actually slowed me down. A better solution is to have *bright* flashlights in key places where I spend most of my time so I can grab one fast (kitchen, office, bedroom, etc.). This is also important for if there was no electricity. Normally, I do keep a flashlight right here on my desk, but I recently took it camping and haven’t put it back yet (already rectified).
  3. I want more fire extinguishers; preferably, one in every room. We keep one upstairs in the master closet, but it would take too long to get it if I really needed it. I think one in every room (closet or corner) is more pragmatic. In fact, it would probably be worth it to also keep a flashlight with each extinguisher. 
  4. I didn’t remember how the fire alarms worked. Once I determined that it was a false alarm, I couldn’t shut them off. The smoke detector that was triggered was the one whose LED was flashing red. It’s not a bright flash, but it was red and the others were green. In order to shut down the alarms, I *had* to press the button on the alarm that first went off. Seems logical and easy sitting in my chair now, and I’m sure that’s exactly what I thought when I first learned how they worked years ago. I probably even said to myself, ‘oh, that’ll be easy to remember because it makes sense.’ However, when you suddenly have gallons of adrenaline pumped into your system, knowing that the lives of your family depend on your swift action, it all comes down to gross motor skills, muscle memory and training. I hadn’t reviewed the operation of the smoke detectors in a long time and consequently, those finer details were not accessible. Extrapolate this to using a gun for protection (hint: practice, practice, practice).
  5. I can still move pretty fast for an ‘old guy’ – adrenaline is a wonderful thing. As a kid, I was taught to make a decision; right, wrong or indifferent – make a decision and take action, no lollygagging. If your decision was wrong, take immediate corrective action and get on with it. It was difficult learning this growing up, but now, having the ability to make split-second decisions in an emergency is priceless.
  6. After this live run-through, I’m having serious doubts about whether I’ll be able to move important items out of the house in time (AFTER the rest of the family is safe. of course). I’ll have to do some serious re-considering on how and where to store critical items. I want to be able to ‘rescue’ certain items and in this order: 1) Family, including dog, 2) Critical living/survival items (wallet [ID, money, credit cards, etc.], clothing, car keys, important docs, Fast Pack, etc.), 3) Critical data items (laptop, backup hard drives, backup optical discs, etc.), 4) Any other survival/preparedness items if there’s time.
  7. Fire drills can only go so far. They can’t reproduce a true fight or flight response necessary to gain insight from the right perspective. We have talked about what to do in a fire, several times and showed the kids what the alarms sound like (not like they woke up to it or anything). It’s nothing like when you think it’s the real thing and lives are at stake. But, the training and practice did serve a purpose, as I was running over that in my head as I was doing everything else.

Rob@prepcast.info

NBC attack “likely” by 2013

It’s something many have decided will happen. Now there is a report from a bipartisan commission stating it publicly and with enough candor that it sounds like they are certain.

Fox news article

Commission report

Still wondering if preparedness is something that needs to be done? With everything else going on, these types of reports and urgings from officials act like a bunch of roadsigns pointing to the need to be prepared. Honestly, did anyone really think with all the misguided people out there that we’d never experience another attack on our soil. The scary part is that when it happens is less likely to be a concventional attack, but more likely one involving NBC.

Do you have the ability to protect and isolate yourself from NBC threats?

  • Tyvek suits
  • Duct tape (not the cheap stuff)
  • Plastic sheeting (cheap and works wonders)
  • Respiratory protection
  • Filtered positive pressure air flow to your house
  • Ability to “DECON” before entering your house

All the above items can be found easily and inexpensively with the exeption the ability to provide filtered postive pressure air to your home. An option for this is what’s commonly referrd to as a “fan in a can.” It may not fit your needs exactly but it should get you started in the right direction.

-Mike

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