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7th Annual ARC Conference December 13-14, 2016 Washington, DC

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Link to 7th Annual ARC Conference

The 7th Annual Advancing & Redefining Communities for Emergency Management (ARC) Conference is held in partnership with the Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center (VEMEC) of the US Department of Veterans Affairs. The 2016 ARC Conference will be held in conjunction with National Healthcare Coalition Resource Center’s (NHCRC) 5th Annual National Healthcare Coalition Preparedness Conference (NHCPC).

2016 LOCATION

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REGISTER TODAY   Click here

BECOMEAN EXHIBITOR/SPONSOR Click here

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

ARC Conference will bring together hospital and health system leaders, government decision-makers, local and state public health leadership and staff, emergency managers, academics and researchers, and industry partners to network, share, and learn.

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2015 Keynote Speaker

Kevin T. Hanretta

Assistant Secretary for Operations, Security, and Preparedness

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

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7th Annual ARC Conference

 

Panel Conversation & Networking Reception

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RSVP by Wednesday, December 7 (live link)

Please disseminate this important Call to Action: Nurses as Leaders in Disaster Preparedness and Response

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http://www.houston.va.gov/pressreleases/News_20080925c.asp

View this recent publication by Veenema et al:

“Nurses as Leaders in Disaster Preparedness and Response—A Call to Action”

Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 2016

Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center (VEMEC), U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has collaborated with a team of experts to engage in an expansive national dialogue in order to improve national preparedness and develop a vision for the future of disaster nursing.

Goal: To create a national nursing workforce with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to respond to disasters and public health emergencies in a timely and effective manner.

Contact us at: FutureDisasterNursing@gmail.com

Read progress updates on our BLOG-WEBPAGE: DisasterNursing.Org

Thank you!

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Nurses as Leaders in Disaster Preparedness and Response: A Call to Action

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ABSTRACT Submitted to the Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health 2016 Meeting

 Title of Poster: Nurses as Leaders in Disaster Preparedness and Response: A Call to Action

Authors: Roberta Lavin, PhD, FNP-BC, University of Missouri-St. Louis (Presenter); Tener Goodwin Veenema, PhD, MPH, MS, RN, FAAN (Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Center for Refugee and Disaster Response Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Mary Pat Couig, PhD, MPH, RN, FAAN, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs; Alicia R. Gable, Mph Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center; Anne Griffin, BSN, MPH Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center

Funding:  The workgroup that produced this work was partially funded by the Veterans Emergency Management Evaluation Center.

Conflict of Interest:  The authors have no known conflict of interest.

Healthcare’s response to a public health emergency is largely dependent on surge capacity of the nurse workforce. Yet, prior efforts to prepare & mobilize nurses for disasters have been episodic & difficult to sustain. Current assessments of professional readiness indicate that nurses are inadequately prepared to respond to disasters.

In order to improve national preparedness and develop a vision for the future of disaster nursing, identify barriers and facilitators to achieving the vision, and develop recommendations for nursing practice, education, policy and research, a series of conference calls were conducted with fourteen national subject matter experts to generate relevant concepts regarding national nursing workforce preparedness. A workshop was held to refine these concepts. Participants included Colleges and Universities, nursing organizations, the American Red Cross, the U.S. Public Health Services and Military, and healthcare organizations. Our panel explored strategies and proposed recommendations to achieve a vision “To create a national nursing workforce with the knowledge, skills, and abilities to respond to disasters and public health emergencies in a timely and effective manner.”

We seek to ensure that all nurses:

  • Possess a minimum knowledge base, skills and abilities regarding disaster response and public health emergency preparedness;
  • respond directly or provide indirect support during a disaster event or public health emergency;
  • promote preparedness amongst individuals in their care, families, communities and within the organizations they represent; and

A set of strategies and education will be presented from each of the four workgroups:

  • Research – Establish a research agenda based on documented gaps in literature, nursing knowledge, skills, and resources
  • Policy – Facilitate deployment of nurses and other health care workers to disaster areas.
  • Practice – support clinical nursing practice during disaster and meet crisis standards of care
  • Education – establish a national set of disaster nursing competencies and evidence based content for academic and lifelong learning opportunities

Nurses as Leaders in Disaster Preparedness and Response—A Call to Actionhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jnu.12198/abstract?globalMessage=0

Tener Goodwin Veenema, PhD, MPH, MS, RN, FAAN1, Anne Griffin, MPH, BSN, RN, CNOR2, Alicia R. Gable, MPH3, Linda MacIntyre, PhD, RN4, RADM Nadine Simons, MS, RN5, Mary Pat Couig, PhD, MPH, RN, FAAN6, John J. Walsh Jr., MS7, Roberta Proffitt Lavin, PhD, APRN-BC8, Aram Dobalian, PhD, JD9, & Elaine Larson, PhD, RN, FAAN, CIC10

 

Abstract

Purpose: To develop a vision for the future of disaster nursing, identify barri- ers and facilitators to achieving the vision, and develop recommendations for nursing practice, education, policy, and research.

Findings: The group developed a vision for the future of disaster nursing, and identified current barriers and opportunities to advance professional disaster nursing. A broad array of recommendations for nursing practice, education, policy, and research, as well as implementation challenges, are summarized in this article.

Conclusions: This project represents an important step toward enhancing nurses’ roles as leaders, educators, responders, policymakers, and researchers in disaster preparedness and response. Nurses and the health and human service organizations that employ them are encouraged to engage in an expansive national dialogue regarding how to best incorporate the vision and recommendations into their individual lives and the organizations for which they work.

Clinical Relevance: Nurses comprise the largest healthcare workforce, and opportunities exist to strengthen disaster readiness, enhance national surge capacity, and build community resiliency to disasters.

 

Source: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jnu.12198/abstract?globalMessage=0

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