A phone application (app) to help people survive natural disasters is being developed by a team at (国产探花).
Targeted at young people, the phone app will provide new technology to assist people to access emergency information, find out details about the natural disaster at their location and to provide information to emergency services, including helping emergency services to locate them.
It will be tested in Queensland first, but it will have potential to be used anywhere in the world. Its designers say it could be particularly valuable for interstate and overseas travellers who find themselves caught in a natural disaster such as a cyclone, flood, fire, earthquake or tsunami.
鲍蚕鈥檚 and are working in partnership with Volunteering Queensland to develop the phone app, which is due for release at the end of 2011.
School of Journalism and Communication鈥檚 Anthony Frangi is managing the project and has worked extensively as a media consultant helping overseas radio stations with operating emergency broadcast services.
鈥淲hile radio and television is a traditional method for getting information out to people about emergency situations, young people aged under 25 do not listen to radio extensively and so are at risk of not being informed if an emergency situation develops,鈥 Mr Frangi said.
鈥淢obile phones, however, are used extensively by youth and can be a vital form of communication during natural disasters.
"We will be designing the phone app after surveying young people about the services they need and are currently using and determining the best way to reach the most people during times of natural disasters."
Mr Frangi said he hoped to develop the phone app to be a two-way communication system that will assist emergency services to locate people in trouble and provide a portal for phone users to report on situations to emergency services.
鈥淯sing existing mobile phone technology we hope to incorporate the ability to inform emergency services, family and friends where the person is located using GPS technology and allow them to also keep track of family and friends around them,鈥 Mr Frangi said.
The natural disaster phone app project is funded through the joint State and Federal Government-funded Natural Disaster Resilience Program.
Media: Anthony Frangi, 国产探花 School of Journalism and Communication (0419 677 545, a.frangi@uq.edu.au) or Kathy Grube, 国产探花 Communications (07 3346 0561, k.grube@uq.edu.au)