FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Michigan Chosen to Participate in National Exercise for Mobilizing Emergency Volunteers
LANSING, Mich. (March 7, 2007)
– The Michigan Department of Community Health (MDCH), Office of Public
Health Preparedness (OPHP) recently participated in a first-of-its-kind exercise
to test the state’s ability to mobilize volunteers in the event of a federal
public health emergency.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) invited the OPHP to participate in the two-day exercise in which HHS and multiple state health departments tested volunteer mobilization and deployment protocols within and between state and federal public health entities. This exercise marked the first time that HHS has conducted a volunteer mobilization exercise that focuses on the need for hundreds of volunteers from all over the country to help in a large-scale federal disaster such as that which occurred during Hurricane Katrina.
An early proponent of electronic
volunteer registration,
The MI Volunteer Registry improves the state’s emergency response capabilities by creating a reserve of qualified, screened volunteers ready to assist when disasters strike. The system is built on Virginia-based Global Secure’s Volunteer Mobilizer platform, a secure, web-based application for registering, credentialing, mobilizing and communicating with large, diverse volunteer groups.
“When an emergency happens, timing of a response is critical,” said Virginia Ball, MI Volunteer Registry Project Coordinator. “Through Global Secure’s platform, we were able to pinpoint the type of volunteers needed and simultaneously notify them via email and text-to-voice telephone calls. That is a huge advantage over relying on spreadsheets and calling out volunteers individually, as had been relied upon in the past.”
The Global Secure system allows users to select volunteers by zip code, skills, their deployment preferences. This can quickly supplement existing emergency response at the local level.
Currently, citizen volunteers may register in one or more of nine MI Volunteer Registry groups. Volunteers indicate contact information, certifications, skills, specialties, availability, and more.
“Many states are finding that
managing the many large, diverse groups of volunteers needed in a major disaster
– from doctors and nurses to electricians, security and food service volunteers
– can be very complex,” said
The exercise tested response times, communication processes, chain of command, how the system performed and how the staff managed it.
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“Through our MI Volunteer Registry,
Having a large and diverse pool of potential volunteers is critical to the MI Volunteer Registry’s success, and state public health officials are actively seeking individuals to add to the Registry. Volunteers with all skill levels and experiences are needed, although the initial focus has been on recruiting physicians, nurses, pharmacists, behavioral health, emergency medical services personnel and ancillary support staff. Other targeted professions and skill sets include security, clergy, interpreters, food service, clerks, electricians and more. To register as a volunteer in the MI Volunteer Registry, visit www.MIVolunteerRegistry.org.
About Global Secure Systems
Global Secure Systems provides emergency planning, response and recovery solutions. Our expertise in information and communication technology and services is currently deployed in states with a combined population of over 100 million people. Our products offer true role-based, multimedia alerting and rich document management capabilities for crisis preparedness and response, monitoring and managing volunteers and hospital capacity management. We also offer the training and exercises required for an effective response. Global Secure works for one result – to secure the homeland with integrated products and services for the critical incident response community worldwide.
For more information contact:
Lisa Waddell, National
Marketing Manager
512-342-6343














