Showing posts with label USA Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA Center. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Hurricane Ike Registry, HikeR, grows to 500


The USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness at the School of Rural Public Health has created a registry for those who have been affected by Hurricane Ike to share experiences and participate in activities and studies over the next five years.

The Hurricane Ike Registry, also called HikeR, stores information used by the USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness to keep in contact with individuals who have opted to be participants in studies that will examine evacuation, sheltering and recovery from Hurricane Ike.

"We hope that through the numerous activities and studies we intend to conduct over the next five years that we are able to improve the response and recovery after hurricanes and other natural disasters," said USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness evaluation manager Jennifer Griffith.

The USA Center has partnered up with different communities and stakeholders to help prepare for natural disasters.

The registry was mainly created as a way to stay in touch with people years after the disaster has occurred, said Griffith.

The studies will be conducted through surveys, interviews and small group discussion.

The registry has grown substantially since its launch in January, said Griffith.

"We have over 500 people in the registry," Griffith said. "We are still recruiting and work primarily through identifying community groups and partners to help us spread the word".

The registry was created by the Knowledge Engineering Center at the School of Rural Public Health to replace the previous, manually done, registration process.

"The CDC designated us as one of their twenty seven Centers for Public Health preparedness," said Barbara Quiram, director of the Office of Special Programs and director of the USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness at the School of Rural Public Health. "Of those 27 centers ours is the only one with a rural focus."

The registry was an extension of the goals that the USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness has been implementing since its foundation in 2002, after the events of Sept. 11, said Quiram.

"They chose to go online to be able to track participants for specific studies, participants that were available, and it made it easier to organize the data for managing that flow of information," said Vince Riggins, Lead Software Applications Developer for the Knowledge Engineering Center.

In addition, HikeR allows individuals affected by the hurricane to register for themselves, so information entered is more likely to be accurate, said Riggins.

-Vicky Flores, The Battalion

Sunday, May 3, 2009

USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness responds to influenza outbreak with educational materials for partners

In response to the current 2009 H1N1 Flu (swine flu) outbreak, the USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness in the Texas A&M Health Science Center School of Rural Public Health has made available toolkits, training modules and public education resources to its local, state and national partners.

According to Barbara Quiram, Ph.D., professor in the HSC-School of Rural Public Health and center director, the center has provided a wide range of downloadable resources that include “Infection Protection in the Classroom Setting” with background information on infectious disease and activities for children in kindergarten through fifth grade, middle school and teenagers; “Infection Prevention in the Workplace” training module; and an “Infection Control for Promotores” training module in Spanish, with a lesson plan guide in both English and Spanish.

These materials, along with the latest information on the 2009 H1N1 Flu from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention and the Texas Department of State Health Services, are online at the center’s website, www.rural-preparedness.org. The website will be updated as new resources become available.

“We encourage you to share this information and these resources with others,” Dr. Quiram said. “Our goal is to make all of this information widely available.”

The USA Center for Rural Public Health Preparedness works with internal and external partners to promote development of skills and competencies that support the nine CDC goals for emergency response and preparedness in primarily rural states and rural sections of the country. Funding is from state and local partners and a grant provided by the CDC as part of the Centers for Public Health Preparedness program.

Monday, January 26, 2009