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EAHA DM 2.2: Communication in Disaster Situations - Captions

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    (English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan)
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    Welcome to the session of Communication in
    Disaster Situations.
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    Communication in disaster situations is potentially
    a huge challenge to respondents.
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    Communication itself is a process in which
    messages are passed from a sender to a receiver
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    with constant feedback.
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    Communication is very important in disaster
    situations.
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    It is important for coordination of the response,
    reduction of risk communication, and for prevention
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    of panic
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    Before we proceed, it is important that you
    read story 2, that is Communication Failure.
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    What is the moral of this story?
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    How to communicate better in disaster situations.
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    It is important to follow the incident command
    hierarchy.
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    In disasters, the press is always looking
    for information and papers sell when adverse
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    events are quoted.
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    Only the incident command officer or his appointee,
    that is, the officer in charge of communications,
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    should be allowed to give press releases.
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    The communications officer should search for
    facts and be ready with evidence.
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    These are the Do's in disaster communication.
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    Establish pre-planned press releases where
    all media houses are informed in advance and
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    invited.
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    Questions should be allowed to clarify events.
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    The Incident Command System Officer should
    be brief, to the point and where there is
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    information lacking, that should be admitted.
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    The Incident Command System (ICS) officer
    consults the relevant section heads before
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    the meeting with press and should allow the
    presence of other section heads to clarify
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    issues in case clarification is necessary.
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    Do not tell lies; it is better to say you
    don't know and you will investigate an issue
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    than to tell a lie.
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    There should be a Public Relations (PR) desk
    or information desk with a list of victims
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    or update information if possible.
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    Such a desk is managed by Public Relations
    personnel, counsellors etc.
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    There should be constant consultation with
    the Incident Command System, Search and Rescue,
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    Pre-hospital care teams, Hospital teams, and
    field teams to get the latest information.
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    Let us consider Scenario 1: Post Election
    Violence in Country X.
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    Country X experienced one of the worst complex
    emergencies since independence.
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    During a commission established to find the
    effects, the police force put the number dead
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    as 1100, the Permanent Secretary for Health
    put them at 1102 and the International organisations
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    put them at 1500.
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    The press concluded all were confused.
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    Question: What is your verdict and where do
    you think things went wrong in the communication
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    chain?
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    What information is needed for communication
    in a disaster situation?
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    You need to know the site of disaster, type of disaster,
    time of disaster, and time information was received,
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    the number of casualties and their flow or
    progress,
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    any visiting VIPs or other important officials,
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    relevant ministry and what has been done so
    far,
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    assistance required and any important appeals
    for blood and other logistics,
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    response efforts at the time, and their successes
    and limitations.
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    These are 5 Communication Failures that Kill
    Operational Success:
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    Mixed messages from multiple experts,
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    Information released late,
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    Paternalistic attitudes (especially towards
    the affected communities),
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    Not countering rumors and myths in real-time
    - the grapevine,
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    Public power struggles and confusion, especially
    between intervening agencies.
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    Let us look at Scenario 2: a flood.
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    In a recent flooding in one of the countries,
    a pressman asked how many people were in need
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    of blankets.
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    The medical officer of health answered, 'none'.
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    Later, it was found that all the 3000 flood
    victims needed non-food items like blankets.
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    Whose responsibility was it to provide the
    right information?
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    These are five communication steps that boost
    operational success:
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    Execute a solid communication plan.
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    Be the first source for information before
    other alternative sources get it.
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    Express empathy early.
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    Show competence and expertise.
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    Show that you are in charge of the situation.
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    Remain honest and open
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    Thank you for listening.
Title:
EAHA DM 2.2: Communication in Disaster Situations - Captions
Description:

This is a remix of 2.2: Communication in Disaster Situations narrated by Roy William Mayega (Makerere University). This version includes English captions. The original video (without captions) can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7c-gzM4Hhbw. Video transcribed by Andrea Matsumoto (University of Michigan). This video is part of a learning module from the East Africa HEALTH Alliance called Public Health Emergency Planning and Management for Districts. The full module and the video transcript can be accessed at http://openmi.ch/disaster-mgmt. Copyright 2009-2019 Roy Mayega (Makerere University). The video, transcript, and module are all shared under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 3.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
07:01

English subtitles

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