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Assessment Questionaire

Select Your Emergency

Home Invasion

Do you have a designated safe room (with a solid door and lock) that all family members know to move to during a break-in?
Do you have a clear, pre-planned route to gather children or other dependents and move them to safety?
Are your exterior doors equipped with reinforced deadbolts or strike plates?
Do you have a 911 call script or essential information list readily accessible (location, entry point, description, dependents in home)?
Do you have motion-activated exterior lighting or another early-warning indicator of movement outside your home?
Is your property fully enclosed by a fence or barrier that limits access points and helps you detect when someone enters your yard?
Do you keep your home’s interior layout free of obstacles to allow fast movement during an emergency?
If you keep a firearm in the home, is it secured in a way that is both safe from children and immediately accessible to the responsible adult in an emergency?
Do you have a planned secondary escape route from your safe room in case the intruder breaches your primary door?
Do you have a way to contact police if you cannot access your cell phone?

Your Score:

House Fire

Do you have working smoke detectors on every level of your home and inside each sleeping area?
Have you practiced a primary escape route from each bedroom with all household members?
Do you have a designated outdoor meeting point where everyone knows to gather after evacuating?
Do you have fire extinguishers placed in critical areas such as the kitchen, garage, and near sleeping areas?
If a fire blocks your primary exit, do you have a planned secondary escape route from each room?
If your bedrooms are upstairs, do you have fire escape ladders and do you know how to deploy them quickly?
Does your family know how to navigate in low visibility by staying low, following walls, and moving toward exits?
If a smoke alarm goes off at night, do you have a clear, pre-planned first action for each adult?
Do you keep flashlights or headlamps in bedrooms to help evacuate during nighttime smoke or power loss?
Do you have nightlights or pathway lighting that make nighttime evacuation faster and safer?

Your Score:

Medical Emergency

Do you know the major signs of a heart attack (chest pressure, shortness of breath, arm/jaw pain)?
Do you know how to respond if someone begins choking (Heimlich maneuver for adults/children)?
Does at least one adult in the home know how to perform CPR and use an AED if available?
Do you know the key signs of a stroke and how to use the FAST test (Face, Arms, Speech, Time)?
Do you know how to keep someone safe during a seizure (protect the head, clear surroundings, never restrain)?
Do you have an easily accessible first-aid kit with items for bleeding control (gauze, gloves, tourniquet if trained)?
Do you know how to respond to severe allergic reactions and where to find an EpiPen if someone in the home needs one?
Do you have a plan for how to quickly guide first responders to your home (visible address, unlocked door, someone meeting them)?
Do you keep a list of medical conditions, allergies, and medications for each family member in an easy-to-reach place?
Do you have nightlights or pathway lighting that make nighttime evacuation faster and safer?

Your Score:

PHILOSOPHY

You don't rise to the occasion, you sink to your lowest level of training. 

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500 Terry Francine St San Francisco, CA 94158

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