1/9/2024 0 Comments Hourworld admin loginElizabeth Dunn, who teaches Global Disaster Management, Humanitarian Relief, and Homeland Security at the University of South Florida’s College of Public Health, offers some of all that to be sure-but the distinction of what she offered us in the recent 90-minute Zoom was what populations in our “bioregion” need in order to be prepared, safe, and connected. The internet, TV, radio, newspapers, and other local media offer lists, maps, and guidelines. There are many ways to learn about disaster preparedness in our community. Tampa Bay Time Bank offers Zoom programs for their membership on a monthly basis. * Tampa Bay Time Bank Third Tuesday Zoom: 6:30 – 8pmĮlizabeth Dunn PhD “Disaster Preparedness in Hillsborough County, Florida” For more information, contact Rita at (608) 335-3383 or send an email to: in Community fabric, Companionship, Gratitude, Health and Prevention, Mind Body Health, The fabric of community, time banking, timebanking Tagged Circle of Care Besides local, hands-on support, the Circle of Care is also Interconnected by digital technologies and cell phones, so even when members may be out of town travelling they can still connect with one another for guidance in this way they keep themselves encircled within this homegrown and powerful system of care. Since its recent inception, the Circle of Care has expanded to 15 participants who bring a host of skills to the circle, including medical, time management and organization, computer know-how, and more. Most of all, the Circle of Care functions to create a sense of belonging driven by compassionate interest in lives beyond our own. This may come in the form of companionship, reassurances, and active listening, not to mention pragmatic supports for transportation, navigation through social services and what can be a fragmented medical system, and estate planning, for instance. The Circle of Care is just such a network of friends who nestle one another in empathy and practical help. Or they’re geographically distant from family and potential caregivers and genuinely need an action-driven support structure. Initially conceived by members Jude McCormick and Tammy Bertoncini, the idea to create the group came from the realization that many elderly people in the Tampa Bay Area live alone. When TBT leadership and volunteers recognized a pivotal community need, members took action and the Circle of Care was formed.
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