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Journal Article

Citation

Spain CV, Green RC, Davis L, Miller GS, Britt S. J. Homeland Secur. Emerg. Manage. 2017; 14(3): e0014.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Walter de Gruyter)

DOI

10.1515/jhsem-2017-0014

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Communities with well-developed animal response plans, along with trained and equipped animal response teams, are typically better able to protect resident livestock and companion animals during a disaster, with fewer animals lost, higher human evacuation compliance rates, and a greater percentage of pets staying with their families. The NCARE Study is a cross-sectional descriptive survey designed to assess, among US states and counties, the level of preparedness for managing animals in an emergency. Overall, 65% of participating states (31/48) reported having a State Animal Response Team (SART), while 48% (16/33) of counties with >1 million population (large counties) and 23% (131/565) of a random sample of counties with <1 million population (small counties) reported having a County Animal Response Team (CART). Only 50% of small counties reported having plans for collocated or cohabitational emergency shelters, compared to 73% of states and 80% of large counties. In stratified analyses, the proportion of counties with a CART ranged from 2% in FEMA Region X to 69% in Region II. Our results demonstrate that many regions of the US have taken some important initial steps towards establishing the capabilities necessary for managing animals in a disaster, while other regions have areas for improvement.


Language: en

Keywords

animals; disaster planning; emergencies; preparedness; response capabilities; survey

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