HEARING
DISABILITY
To assist people with hearing
disabilities during an emergency situation, you must
take into account the following:
- Turn lights on and off
several times to call their attention.
- Make eye contact with
the person even if there is an interpreter.
- Place yourself facing
a light source. Do not move your head and never chew
gum.
- Make gestures with your
face and hands to ensure your message is understood.
- Verify if the message
was understood; if not, repeat it.
- Use pencil and paper.
Slowly write down the instructions allowing the person
to read as you write them. This method is very useful
when you have difficulties getting your message through
and when it is impossible for you to understand what
the disabled person is trying to say.
- Do not allow anybody to
interrupt you or tell jokes while you are giving information
about the evacuation plan.
- Be patient. It might be
difficult for the disabled person to understand the
urgency of your message.
- If necessary, separate
the person from the rest of the group. Give him or
her a flashlight or portable lamp to signal where
he or she is and to facilitate lip-reading in the
darkness.
LEARNING
DEFICIENCIES
People with learning deficiencies
may have difficulties following orders issued by rescue
brigades. For these reasons, the following may be useful
for assisting these people in case of a disaster; you
shoud have in mind the following:
- Their visual perception
of instructions and written signs may be deficient
or confusing.
- Their sense of orientation
may be limited; therefore, they may need somebody
to guide them.
- Information and orders
should be brief. You must be very patient.
- Symbols and signals should
be simple.
- If a person is capable
of understanding what is being said, then it means
that he or she is in better condition than one who
understands only his/her vocabulary.
- You must talk to and treat
people with learning disabilitiesas adults not as
children.
VISUAL
DISABILITY
This disability applies to people who suffer from visual
deficiency or blindness. To assist these people during
an emergency, you must follow these rules:
- Announce yourself loudly
when you enter the room.
- Do not shout or talk through
a third person; talk naturally and directly to the
disabled person.
- Do not be afraid to use
words like "see", "look" or "blind".
- Besides offering assistance,
you should ask for the type of help the person needs.
- Always indicate what you
are going to do before doing it.
- Hold the person gently
by the arm or wrist so that you may serve him or her
as a guide. The disabled person may evacuate the place
walking by him or herself; however, with your help
he or she may note your reactions before obstacles.
- Make sure you indicate
the presence of stairs, doors, narrow passages, ramps,
etc.
- Assist the disabled person
when sitting down by placing his or her hand in the
back of the chair.
- If there are many people
with visual disabilities in the same place, they should
hold hands and follow the leader.
- Once safe outside the
building, you must make sure that all persons are
accounted for. Should there be anyone missing, leave
the group under the care of other staff while the
emergency passes, and seek the missing person.
WALKING
DISABILITY
Persons using one crutch
or a cane are capable of using stairs without special
help, as long as they can hold to the handrail and find
no obstacles in the way. If a person needs two crutches,
carrying one of the crutches may help him or her. Assistance
may also be given by opening way if the stairs are crowded.
People who use wheel chairs
know how to move from one chair to another. Depending
on the strength of their arms and body, they may do
almost all the work. If you help a person on a wheel
chair, do not put pressure on their limbs and chest.
This may cause pain spasms and block breathing. Carrying
a person over your shoulders is like sitting on their
chest; this may be dangerous for those individuals who
also have neurological or orthopedic disabilities.
We thank the Universidad Autónoma de México:
Protección Civil Universitaria de México
for its contribution for this page.
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