Earthquake is a destructive natural disaster, so what should we do when there is an earthquake? Let me give you some advice.
Quickly move from houses, buildings, mountains and lakes to open, flat areas.
When an earthquake occurs, the most effective way is to quickly hide nearby. The bathroom at home is the safest place. The bathroom space is small and not easily damaged by collapsing ceilings and walls. In addition, there is water in the bathroom, which can sustain people's lives.
When an earthquake occurs, toilets are the first choice. Secondly, we should choose small rooms, such as storage room, study room, airless kitchen and so on. The corner of the room is also a safer place. When the house collapses, it is easy to leave a safe living space in the interior corner. In addition, it can quickly escape to bed, table, refrigerator, washing machine and other solid objects next to or under.
Crouch down and place pillows, quilts, and school bags on your head to protect it. Cover your mouth, nose, and face with a handkerchief, towel, or hand to prevent dust from clogging your mouth, nose, and eyes.
After the earthquake, we should reduce all kinds of activities, maintain good physical strength, firm confidence, and patiently wait for rescue.
When the earthquake is over, don't rush to yell, but save energy. Rescuers won't arrive until hours after the earthquake. Rushing to shout wastes precious energy.
If it is available, you should timely your relatives. To fully conserve energy, you can turn it off intermittently and use it at critical times.
When you hear the sound of help, you should call for help. The shouts should be as long as possible so rescuers can hear them.
If it can be used, it should be timely to call for help, play or loudly play music, or use rocks to smash walls and metal objects to send rescue signals.