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Disaster Preparedness and Survival: Why
Sanitation is So Important!
If I were to ask you to identify the most significant
medical breakthrough in the past 150 years, how would you
answer? For most of us we immediately think of
high-profile medical advances, such as the discovery of
penicillin and antibiotics, or the invention of the
X-ray, the realization that we are products of a basic
structure called DNA, the elimination of major disease
processes such as smallpox, plague, and others, or the
incredible life-saving virtues of automatic
de-fibrillation, transplants, and others. In fact, if you
were to Google 'Nobel Prize Winning Medical Advances' you
will find a host of incredible achievements, all that
have improved longevity and quality of life.
And yet, none of them win the prize for being the most
significant medical advancement of the past 150 years.
The winner may surprise you...
The British Medical Journal recently surveyed more than
11,000 readers, mostly physicians, and asked them the
exact same question we asked you: What was the most
significant medical breakthrough in the past 150 years?
The winner: Sanitation.
Perhaps the Indianapolis Star said it best, "How can it
be that seemingly mundane, homely sanitation -- including
sewage, reliably clean water, decent housing -- could
possibly earn more votes than Nobel Prise-winning
advances? Because the best measure of a medical advance
is not its complexity, but what it does for the length
and quality of our lives."
Proper sanitation and hygiene eliminated deadly diseases
such as cholera and infection, and paved the way for the
creation of a large and sophisticated network of
structures and infrastructures that have revolutionized
our lives. Today we simply turn on the faucet or flush
the commode and viola' we have water to drink and waste
water to flush. Today we benefit from a public health
system that stands as a constant watch dog to ensure that
our sanitation, living and hygiene needs are met.
But what if I were to remove all these conveniences. No
running water. No flushing toilets. No structures,
institutions or infrastructure for you to rely upon for
sanitation and proper hygiene. What would your life look
like?
The hidden danger in natural and man-made disasters is
not so much in the actual events, (which is usually what
gets all the news), but in the consequences of those
events. The most significant of these consequences is
disruptions in sanitation and personal hygiene,
consequences that transport us back to a time when lack
of sanitation was a leading cause of disease and death.
Don't take my opinion on it, believe the 11,000 readers
of the British Medical Journal.
So, how should a reasonable person prepare for a
disruption in structures and infrastructures that support
our system of sanitation? Here are three things you
should be thinking about to prepare for the big one
should it wash up on your shores:
1) Clean water for drinking and washing. Most experts
agree that the average person requires two gallons a day
of water for cleaning and drinking. This includes water
for washing as well as removing waste, (don't forget that
most toilets require 3 gallons to flush).
SurvivalOutpost.com recommends that you keep a minimum of
7 days water storage for your family, (7 days times 2
gallons times the number of people in your family). A
30-day supply is even better.
2) Emergency Preparedness Kit. Individuals, families and
businesses should keep Emergency Preparedness and
Disaster Survival Kits on hand that include the necessary
sanitation, hygiene, and survival tools and equipment to
help you maintain a safe quality of living should you be
required to live 'off the grid' for an extended period of
time. Most standard Disaster Survival Kits include
toilets, toilet bags, antibacterial gels, sanitation
wipes, soaps and other sanitation/hygiene necessities.
3) Non-perishable food. Keep in mind, a component of
proper sanitation and hygiene is food that does not spoil
and expose us to the risk of deadly food-borne diseases.
The best foods for long-term storage and emergency
preparedness are those that are 'ready to eat' and do not
require refrigeration, such as dehydrated foods, military
Meals Ready To Eat, canned meats, power bars, etc. As
before, we recommend a minimum 7 day supply of
nutritious, healthy, high protein foods in your supply.
Remember Occam's Razor: the simplest explanation is
almost always the best. It wasn't the incredibly complex
medical advances that won the day, it was simple
sanitation and hygiene, two things that are well within
your control and ability to prepare for.
Stay informed. Stay prepared. Stay safe.
Original at:
http://survivaloutpost.blogspot.com:80/2009/02/disaster-preparedness-survival-why.html |