A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [CLOSE]

Winter Weather Preparedness

 
This page has been automatically translated from English. MSDH has not reviewed this translation and is not responsible for any inaccuracies.

Stay Informed

Indoor Safety

Staying Safe

Any heater that burns fuel, such as your furnace, generator, gas water heater or a portable butane or gas heater, produces carbon monoxide that can contaminate the air. Mild exposure to carbon monoxide can cause nausea, dizziness or headaches. Severe poisoning can result in brain or heart damage, or even death.

  • Do not use generators, gas or charcoal grills indoors.
    Carbon monoxide dangers »
  • Never burn anything in a stove or fireplace that is not vented properly.
  • Never heat your house with a gas oven.
  • Never run a generator indoors, in an enclosed space such as a basement, or near a window.
  • Do not warm your car up in a closed garage.
  • If your garage is attached to your house, close the door to the house while you warm up the car.

Staying Healthy

  • If power is out for less than two hours, food in your refrigerator and freezer will be safe to eat. Keep refrigerator and freezer doors closed as much as possible to keep food cold longer.
  • After two hours, a freezer that is half full will hold food safely for up to 24 hours. A full freezer will hold food safely for 48 hours.
  • After two hours, pack milk, other dairy products, meat, fish, eggs, gravy, and spoilable leftovers into a cooler surrounded by ice. Inexpensive Styrofoam coolers are fine for this purpose.
  • Safe water for drinking, cooking, and personal hygiene includes bottled, boiled, or treated water. Watch for specific boil water alerts in your area.
  • If you are under a boil-water alert, do not use contaminated water to wash dishes, brush your teeth, wash and prepare food, wash your hands, make ice, or make baby formula. If possible, use baby formula that does not need to have water added.
  • Boiling water, when practical, is the preferred way to kill harmful bacteria and parasites. Bringing water to a rolling boil for 1 minute will kill most organisms.

Outdoor Safety

  • Watch for signs of hypothermia (uncontrolled shivering, slow speech, memory loss, stumbling, sleepiness, extreme tiredness).
  • Watch for signs of frostbite: Feeling of "pins and needles" followed by numbness (no feeling). Skin may freeze hard and look white. When thawed out, skin is red and painful. Very bad frostbite may cause blisters or gangrene (black, dead tissue).
  • If you think you have frostbite or hypothermia, don't eat or drink anything containing caffeine or alcohol – they can worsen your symptoms.
  • Drink warm liquids that do not contain caffeine or alcohol. (alcoholic drinks cause your body to lose heat more quickly).

In Your Car

  • Listen for travel warnings.
  • Avoid unnecessary trips in order to keep off icy roads. Ice may be more likely on bridges; plan your route to avoid bridges when possible.
  • Let someone know where you are going and when you expect to arrive. Ask them to notify help if you are late.
  • Check and restock emergency supplies in your car before you leave.
  • Never pour water on your windshield to remove ice or snow; the windshield may shatter.

Stay Prepared

Make an Emergency Kit

Make a Family Communication Plan

Get health alerts and our free newsletter by e-mail: 
Last reviewed on May 17, 2016
Mississippi State Department of Health 570 East Woodrow Wilson Dr Jackson, MS 39216 866-HLTHY4U web@HealthyMS.com
Facebook Twitter RSS