Natural disasters cost billions in infrastructure repairs and claim tens of thousands of lives each year. In 2016, there were 91 weather, climate or geological disasters in the U.S.—including severe storms, hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes, heat waves and droughts. Globally, there were 750 disasters in 2016, the highest number in four years.1
This summer, five teams of Booz Allen Summer Games interns are using technology to address some of the biggest challenges around disaster response – from helping evacuate people with functional needs, to pinpointing regions in urgent need for emergency responders, to enabling people to judge the depth of standing water.
Below, read about the teams’ transformative work in their own words:
- Speeding Emergency Care to People with Functional Needs
“The elderly, and people with access or functional needs are often at higher risk than other populations during a disaster situation,” said Hannah Bruening from Booz Allen Summer Games Team Access. “With our Functional Needs Preparedness App, we hope to streamline emergency management and give those with access and functional needs the peace of mind and safety that they deserve during a crisis.” The app can be accessed through a mobile web browser.
- Putting Crowdsourcing to Work for Emergency Responders
“During weather disasters, emergency responders often have limited information about where help is most needed. To tackle this head on, we developed a crowdsourcing app that allows responders to gather information efficiently from the public and execute emergency response where it’s needed most,” said Marisa Machlis from Team CROWD (Crowdsourcing Response Optimization for Weather Disasters).