

| “Preparing
for a pandemic influenza outbreak involves everybody. The threat of pandemic influenza
is real, and America needs leadership from respected community members
to prepare our towns and cities, reduce the impact of pandemic flu on
individuals and families, and reduce or even prevent serious damage to the
economy.” |
An infectious
disease takes time to spread through a family or
household. Many families see this happen with the
common cold: the virus may take up to 6 weeks to go through
the entire family, passing from person to person. | “Members
of households with ill individuals may be recommended to stay home for an incubation
period, 7 days (voluntary quarantine) following the time of symptom onset in the
household member. If other family members become ill during this
period, the recommendation is to extend the time of voluntary home quarantine for
another incubation period, 7 days from the time that the last
family member becomes ill.” Community Strategy for Pandemic Influenza
Mitigation, Feb. 2007 Use of Nonpharmaceutical Interventions by Pandemic Severity Category |

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[Discussing school closures] “In addition, planning for dismissal of students from schools and school-based activities and closure of childcare programs, in combination with means to reduce out-of-school social contacts and community mixing for these children, should encompass up to 12 weeks of intervention in the most severe scenarios.” Interim Pre- Pandemic Planning Guidance - CDC |
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“The
population may be directed to remain in their homes under self-quarantine
for up to 90 days per
wave of the outbreak to support social distancing
practices.” Pandemic
Influenza: Best Practices and Model Protocols – US Department of Homeland Security |
Our
lives are
supported by critical complex
systems: health care, electricity, water,
sewer, etc. These are the complex
systems we take for granted; however they can break down
quickly if people are not there to run
them. When workers (or their families)
get pandemic flu, the critical
infrastructure may degrade or fail. See
“About Pandemics” on the homepage
for information on how these critical systems affect you personally.
Add to
this
the “just-in-time” business model adopted
universally over the last
decades. Supplies are not kept on-site, but rather ordered
“just-in-time” from regional
warehouses. Consequently, your grocery store has
approximately
three days of cornflakes on the shelves. The former
warehouse is now on wheels.
Storing
at least 12 weeks of supplies makes excellent economic sense,
particularly
for those on tight budgets.
If
you
have been working towards 3 months of supplies, you will be
more likely to have resources to share in a time of need with
trusted friends, extended family members,
and neighbors. | [US State Department]
Due to varying
conditions overseas, Americans abroad should evaluate their situation and
prepare emergency
supplies accordingly (non-perishable food, potable water, medicines,
etc.) for the possibility of sheltering-in-place for at least two and up to twelve weeks. How to Prepare for "Sheltering-In-Place" |
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“Local
communities will have to address the medical and nonmedical effects of the pandemic with
available resources. This means that it is essential
for communities, tribes, States, and regions to have plans in place to
support the full spectrum of their needs over the course of weeks or months…” National Strategy for Pandemic |
Preparing
for
three months allows you to face the disruptions that will come
with a pandemic in relative safety and comfort. Nearly
everything in our lives comes
from somewhere else. Food, medicine, water, electricity,
money, and health care all require society to be fully functioning in
order
to bring these goods to you. During a pandemic, these systems
will suffer. Some will fail
outright. You may find yourself having to work with what you
have
on hand at the start of the pandemic. The more supplies you
have,
the more choices you have.
The
important thing is
that sound science and reason strongly suggest that
the time
to begin is NOW.