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Damage on a house from Hurricane Otis

Hurricane Otis has made landfall on the Pacific coast on 25 October, with winds reaching 165mph (266 km/h). It had intensified from a tropical storm into a category five hurricane - the most severe category - in just 12 hours - and became the strongest storm ever to hit Mexico’s Pacific coast damaging more than 200,000 homes. Acapulco was among the areas worst hit in Mexico, with 80% of the resort's hotels damaged and streets flooded. Families have lost their entire homes, schools are damaged, and hundreds of thousands of people were without power and water. 11-year-old Diego* speaks of his experience: “I had a bad time, a tree fell when we were inside the house, we went into a room to protect ourselves, but the rain and the wind were pushing the door, we had to put a bed and a sofa against the door to keep the water out, it was the only way to survive. I was left without clothes and I would like to go back to school, but for now we can't". While seven-year-old twin sisters Nayeli* and Ana* say: “we need food, water, shades because it’s very hot here,” Save the Children delivered a Humanitarian Response in the Guerrero region on November 3 supplying food, water, hygiene and wellbeing kits. In one shelter, Save the Children created a child-friendly space where HEAR activities are carried out to help children process traumatic experiences following the Category five Hurricane. Miguel Vera/ Save the Children

Guide: How to help children in a hurricane, storm, cyclone or typhoon

9 Oct 2024 Global

This 9-step guide provides tips on how to keep children safe during a hurricane, storm, cyclone or typhoon. 

Around 126 million people – of which almost 3 in 10 are children – live in hurricane-prone areas in parts of the US, Latin America, the Caribbean, and eastern Canada. 

This means that this year alone, 35 million children are under threat from the most active Atlantic Hurricane season ever.

WE STAND SIDE BY SIDE WITH CHILDREN IN THE WORLD'S TOUGHEST PLACES.

The Atlantic hurricane season officially started in July and runs until November. Researchers at the Colorado State University (CSU) predict 23 named storms this season, with 11 predicted to become hurricanes and five to reach major hurricane strength (Category 3-5).

This level of activity is 170% greater than the average season from 1991–2020. According to CSU researchers, this is mainly due to record warm sea surface temperatures as a result of climate change, in addition to the development of La Nina conditions in the Pacific, and reduced Atlantic trade winds and wind shear.

Press Release

Save the Children staff monitoring the damage from Hurricane Otis. Miguel Vera/ Save the Children Miguel Vera/ Save the Children

Only a few weeks into the hurricane season, Hurricane Beryl, the first category 5 hurricane, turned the lives of people in countries in the Caribbean like Jamaica and Haiti upside down. Only two weeks ago, communities in Florida, South Carolina and Tennessee, sustained significant damage during Hurricane Helene. Now the same communities face the potentially catastrophic category 5 hurricane Milton.

Save the Children has been supporting children’s most critical needs in emergencies along the Gulf Coast since 2005, including Hurricanes Ian, Irma, Michael, Idalia and Beryl. We are leaders when it comes to responding to the specific needs of children and families after a disaster through coordinating emergency distributions of child-centric supplies, supporting the recovery of childcare centres, and provides mental health support programs to help children and their families cope and build resilience.

As the climate crisis intensifies the frequency and severity of extreme weather events and coastal areas become more populated, millions of children in storm-prone areas face increased risks like floods, landslides, damage to homes and schools, heightened exposure to disease, and even death.  

Here are 9 tips on how to best help children before, during and after a typhoon, cyclone, storm or hurricane:

1. Talk to your children about extreme weather events

  • Explain to your child what could happen using simple words
  • Discuss your local early warning systems, and how you will stay informed
How to help children in a hurricane (Stills)

Takayo Akiyama, Illustrations and Tom Fincham, Design/Save the Children

2. Prepate an emergency plan

  • Identify your safe locations or mergency shelters and the routes to get to them.
  • Remind your children that their safety is your biggest priority

3. Prepare a go bag

  • Get children to help prepare damily Go Bags with essential items: clean water, first aid kit, medicines, emergency contact information, snacks

 

How to help children in a hurricane (Stills)

Takayo Akiyama, Illustrations and Tom Fincham, Design/Save the Children

4. Practice evacuation drills

  • Practice at home and school so that children can evacuate quickly and safely if needed
  • Plan and practice two ways out of your neighbourhood, in case one route is blocked.
  • Remember bridges may be washed out and low-lying areas may be flooded

5. In storms, use the 30/30 rule

  • If you hear thunder within 30 seconds of a lightning flash, go inside and stay there. 
  • Wait at least 30 minutes after you hear thunder before going back outside.
How to help children in a hurricane (Stills)

Takayo Akiyama, Illustrations and Tom Fincham, Design/Save the Children

6. Be prepared to evacuate

  • Evacuate early to your designated shelter 
  • If you must evacuate, wear protective clothing suited to your climate

7. Get indoors and stay indoors 

  • Close storm shutters 
  • Stay on the lower floors of your building, but not where flood waters can rise.  
  • Close and stay away from windows and doors.
How to help children in a hurricane (Stills)

Takayo Akiyama, Illustrations and Tom Fincham, Design/Save the Children

8. If you are stuck outside

  • Do not shelter under trees or unstable structures
  • Seek shelter in a ditch to avoid flying objects

9. Don’t go outside until it’s safe to do so 

  • Monitor weather reports until the weather has passed
  • Stay where you are until you get an official ‘all clear’ message
  • Fallen trees, live electrical wires, burst sewage pipes and other hazards can be dangerous for weeks after the initial damage

Children are particularly vulnerable in emergencies. Secondary impacts of emergencies can be just as dangerous as the emergencies themselves, so children must continue to be protected after the first emergency has passed. 

Remember to stay alert for any significant changes in children’s sleeping patterns, eating habits, and concentration levels and watch for wide emotional swings or frequent physical complaints.

If any of these actions do happen, they will likely lessen within a short time. If they continue, however, you should seek professional help and counselling for the child once the emergency is over.

Know a child or adult these tips could help? Share!

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