Household medical 72-hour readiness
Most household medical emergencies do not happen on a Tuesday afternoon when the doctor is in.
Open the 72 hours list →Most household medical emergencies happen at the worst possible time. The depth you build is the gap you close between the event and access to care.
Most household medical emergencies do not happen on a Tuesday afternoon when the doctor is in.
Open the 72 hours list →Two weeks of medical readiness is the line where a household stops planning for the late-night emergency and starts planning for the late-night emergency that happens during a power outage, on a holiday weekend, in a snowstorm, in a quarantine.
Open the 2 weeks list →Three months of medical readiness is the system that survives a supply-chain disruption, a regional health emergency, or a long stretch where the household cannot easily reach pharmacies or providers.
Open the 3 months list →Long-term medical resilience is the household at the standard of care a thoughtful EMT might run from home — not because the household is replacing the medical system, but because the household can hold for the gap between an event and access.
Open the indefinite list →