3 Tips For Helping Your Family Prepare For An Emergency

3 Tips For Helping Your Family Prepare For An Emergency

 

While you might like to hope that your life with your family will always function according to plan, it’s unrealistic and, frankly, irresponsible to not at least contemplate how you’d handle emergencies that come your way. From weather calamities and active shooter events to house fires and major illness, emergencies can happen anytime and anywhere. So to help you and your family be prepared for anything life has to throw at you, here are three tips for helping your family be ready for all types of emergencies.

 

Put Together An Emergency Kit

 

One of the first and best ways that you and your family can prepare for an emergency is to put together an emergency kit. According to SafeHome.org, your basic emergency kit should include things like water, food, a can opener, a flashlight and extra batteries, a blanket or sleeping bag, first aid supplies, some form of communication, and cash. With these things on-hand for each person in your family, you should be able to survive at least a few days if something were to happen to knock out the power to your home or made it so you didn’t have access to water or electricity.

 

Create A Plan For Home

 

In addition to having supplies ready for an emergency, you should also create a plan for your family to execute if and when said emergency should arise. Depending on the type of emergency you’re dealing with, the exact plan that you create will vary. To help with this, Ready.gov recommends that you make plans for all possible emergencies that are possibilities in your area and consider things like what you’ll do for shelter, how you plan to evacuate, and what your strategy is for communicating with members of your family or with emergency responders. Once you have these plans in place, make sure you take the time to practice running through them so your family can work out the kinks before a real emergency takes place.

 

Create A Plan For Everywhere Else

 

Because you don’t spend all your time at home, you should also create emergency response plans for the other areas where you might be when something unexpected happens. In many cases, your work or your children’s school should have their own plans that they will execute in the event of an emergency. But according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, you should also consider how you should respond and how you should teach your children to respond if there’s an emergency at school, at work, or at another public place.

 

To help you and your family stay safe in the face of unexpected danger, consider using the tips mentioned above to prepare for potential emergencies.

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