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Emergency Preparedness for People Living Alone | Salars
Emergency preparedness when it'
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Emergency Preparedness Essentials
177-page guide covering 30 days of structured preparation β water, food, comms, energy, and security.
Emergency Preparedness for People Living Alone
Emergency preparedness when it'
36 million Americans live alone. Most emergency planning assumes you have a household. If it's just you, the priorities shift.
The biggest risk isn't the emergency itself β it's that no one notices you need help.
Solo-Specific Priorities
#1: Check-In System
This is your most important preparation. If you're injured or incapacitated, how long before someone realizes?
Set up at least one:
- β’ Daily check-in buddy β a friend/family member you text every morning. If they don't hear from you, they check.
- β’ Trusted neighbor with a key β someone who can physically get to you
- β’ Medical alert device β if you have health conditions, this is worth the cost
- β’ Smart home alerts β motion sensors that flag inactivity (simple, cheap)
#2: Self-Rescue Capability
In a family, someone can go for help. Alone, you need to plan for self-extraction:
- β’ Keep your phone charged and within reach always β this is non-negotiable
- β’ Multiple exits mapped β know every way out of your place
- β’ Basic first aid knowledge β you're your own first responder
- β’ Shoes and flashlight by the bed β broken glass is a real post-earthquake risk
#3: Decision-Making Framework
In a family, you discuss decisions. Alone, you need to make them quickly and clearly:
- β’ Pre-decide your evacuation triggers β don't wait for βsomeone else to decideβ
- β’ Know your shelter-in-place plan β which room, what supplies, how long
- β’ Have a destination β where do you go if you leave? Don't decide during stress.
Solo Advantages
Living alone isn't all vulnerability. You have genuine preparedness advantages:
The Solo Go-Bag
Your go-bag is simpler than a family's. Keep it by the door or in your car:
Must-Have:
- β’ Phone charger + battery bank
- β’ Cash ($200 in small bills)
- β’ Copies of all important docs
- β’ 3 days of medication
- β’ Water bottle + purification tablets
- β’ LED headlamp
Worth Adding:
- β’ One change of clothes + layers
- β’ Basic toiletries
- β’ Multitool or pocket knife
- β’ Emergency blanket (mylar, $3)
- β’ Physical address book
- β’ Snack bars (high calorie)
Total weight: under 10 lbs. Total cost: under $80. Fits in any backpack.
Want the Full Solo-Adapted Plan?
The Emergency Preparedness Essentials guide works for any household size β including one. 30 days of structured daily tasks, scaled to your situation.
See the Complete Plan β $29 β
Related Pages
Living alone means planning ahead matters more β not less.
You're the whole team. Make sure you're ready.
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