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Objectives:

To understand key features of intergovernmental relations, mutual aid agreements, and community networks

To appreciate the importance of coordination in mobilizing resources

Coordination is critical during all four phases of emergency management and the more complex the community the more important coordination becomes. We define coordination and distinguish it from integration. Various forms of coordination are considered.

Example 1

Linda davis

Description of Principle: “The more complex the community, the more important it is to establish coordination” (Danso&Gillespie, 2010, p. 113).

Justification: In today’s globalized world, well-coordinated efforts are critical in disaster management. While many well-established and efficient organizations exist, “no single organization is capable of successfully handling today’s global problems such as natural disasters” (Danso&Gillespie, 2010, p. 115). By coordinating and sharing knowledge and resources, organizations involved in disaster management can serve their communities with more efficiency and provide higher quality services.

Social Work Relevance: Coordination is important in all aspects of social work, but especially in disaster response and disaster recovery situations. In a world of complex disasters, the social worker must “be sensitive to the obstacles of coordination and how to overcome them” (Danso&Gillespie, 2010, p. 115). Social workers must help successfully manage the community’s resources, such as information, people, money, physical space and equipment. Social workers who promote and maintain a high level of coordination within their communities “are more likely to help their communities achieve effective disaster management systems” (Danso&Gillespie, 2010, p. 115).

Related Definitions:

Coordination : the cooperation of independent unites for the purpose of eliminating fragmentation, gaps in service delivery, and unnecessary duplication of services (Danso&Gillespie, 2010, p. 119)

Coordinated Assistance Network (CAN): a Network of people, information and tools designed

to facilitate year-round collaboration across agencies supporting client and resource management for large-scale disaster recovery events (Coordinated Assistance Network, n.d., p. 1)

St. Louis Area Regional Response System (STARRS): a coordinated regional response to large-scale critical incidents in the bi-state region surrounding St. Louis (St. Louis Area Regional Response System, n.d., p. 1)

Emergency Patient Tracking System (EPTS): a wireless triage system provides area hospitals, health

departments, Missouri National Guard and Missouri State Emergency Management

Agency with instant, interoperable, reliable and secure communications in times of need (St. Louis Area Regional Response System, n.d., p. 1)

Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC): a congressionally ratified organization that provides form and structure to interstate mutual aid (National Emergency Management Association, 2009, p. 1)

National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disasters (NVOAD): the forum where organizations share knowledge and resources throughout the disaster cycle—preparation, response and recovery—to help disaster survivors and their communities (NVOAD, 2011, pp.1)

Illustrations:

A dog sitting on a bed

This diagram shows the typical structure of a disaster coordination council.

A dog sitting on a bed

This picture illustrates how if people aren’t working with each other, they can often end up impeding each other. The same is true for organizations.

Example 2

Brodie mueller

Principle : Coordination is the most effective way to respond to a disaster.(Danso&Gillespie (2010). Coordination: A key community resource in disasters. Disaster Concepts and Issues. Pp. 113-131.)

Justification : No agency is an island, and no agency can do everything on their own. Therefore, we need to be collaborating with other agencies to provide timely and appropriate response to a disaster. It is also important that collaborators have the same vision and are not competing to provide the most services or save the most money.

Social Work Relevance : Social workers are good at collaborating with others and understand that people have many different influences and sources of support. We then need to keep our collaborations in mind when responding to a disaster and have the largest, most effective response. Likewise, we can use people's own collaborations to find their strengths and use them for an individualized response.

Definition : Coordination - An agreed-on relationship between independent organizations to work for hazard mitigation, disaster preparedness, response and recovery. (Danso and Gillespie, 2010, p 113)

Illustration :

A dog sitting on a bed

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Source:  OpenStax, Disaster and vulnerable populations. OpenStax CNX. Aug 09, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11340/1.1
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