Four-Legged Family Members Must Be
Included in Emergency Plans
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SOCIAL SCIENCES |
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Description
Over the past several decades, household pets have
come to occupy an increasingly intimate place in the
modern family, gaining nearly the status of children
or other loved ones. Yet, caring for pet safety in a
disaster has often been an afterthought.
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Newswise — Over the past several decades, household pets
have come to occupy an increasingly intimate place in the
modern family, gaining nearly the status of children or
other loved ones. Yet, according to University of Colorado,
Boulder sociologist, Leslie Irvine, caring for pet safety in
a disaster has often been an afterthought.
"Almost 100 percent of people who have pets describe them
as family members," said Irvine. "And all family members
need to be considered in a disaster plan."
In a presentation last week at the annual meeting of the
Society for Social Problems in Philadelphia, Irvine said
pets and livestock are now on the radar screen when
emergency teams respond to a hurricane, chemical spill or
other catastrophe.
Nearly a decade ago, that was not the case. Evacuations
from Hurricane Andrew left some 1,000 deserted pets to be
euthanized for lack of space to care for them. In 1999, more
than 3 million pets and farm animals died in the wake of
Hurricane Floyd.
Irvine contrasted the loss of animals during those
disasters with data she collected in Fla. last year in the
aftermath of Hurricane Charley, which was rated a category 4
storm with winds up to 145 miles per hour.
She examined interagency communication, the role of
volunteers, animal identification procedures, interagency
communication, and how emergency workers provided assistance
to anguished pet owners who were separated from their
animals.
Her main finding: "No animal had to be euthanized due to
lack of space."
Irvine also studied how human attitudes, which she calls
"myths," influence emergency workers and their approach to
free-roaming animals in a disaster area.
"Alongside the myths about looting and price gouging,
hurricane Charley revealed the myth of what I call 'the
dangerous dog pack,'" she said. Although scientific studies
have not confirmed that behavior in newly displaced house
pets, it "has serious implications for the treatment of
animals displaced by disasters," Irvine said.
Animals may suffer when such myths pervade "Incident
Command Systems"--firmly institutionalized and successful
sets of procedures for managing people in a crisis. Irvine
called for a re-examination and modification of emergency
response plans to better reflect actual, personal
experiences with animal behavior.
Additional information is available in the University of
Colorado press release:
http://www.colorado.edu/news/
Information on disaster preparedness for pets, horses and
livestock is available through:
The Humane Society of the United States:
http://www.hsus.org/hsus_field/hsus_disaster_center
The American Veterinary Medical Association:
http://www.avma.org/disaster/saving_family.asp.
The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent
federal agency that supports fundamental research and
education across all fields of science and engineering, with
an annual budget of nearly $5.47 billion. NSF funds reach
all 50 states through grants to nearly 2,000 universities
and institutions. Each year, NSF receives about 40,000
competitive requests for funding, and makes about 11,000 new
funding awards. The NSF also awards over $200 million in
professional and service contracts yearly.
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