| International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | |
| The Los Angeles County Community Disaster Resilience Project — A Community-Level, Public Health Initiative to Build Community Disaster Resilience | |
| David Eisenman3  Anita Chandra4  Stella Fogleman3  Aizita Magana3  Astrid Hendricks3  Ken Wells1  Malcolm Williams2  Jennifer Tang1  | |
| [1] Center for Health Services and Society, David Geffen School of Medicine, 10920 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 300, Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA; E-Mails:;RAND Corporation, 1776 Main Street, Santa Monica, CA 90401, USA; E-Mail:;Los Angeles County Department of Public Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Program, 600 S. Commonwealth Avenue, Suite 700, Los Angeles, CA 90005, USA; E-Mails:;RAND Corporation, 1200 South Hayes Street, Arlington, VA 22202, USA; E-Mail: | |
| 关键词: resilience; disaster; preparedness; public health; randomized trial; community engagement; organizational linkage; table-top exercise; | |
| DOI : 10.3390/ijerph110808475 | |
| 来源: mdpi | |
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【 摘 要 】
Public health officials need evidence-based methods for improving community disaster resilience and strategies for measuring results. This methods paper describes how one public health department is addressing this problem. This paper provides a detailed description of the theoretical rationale, intervention design and novel evaluation of the Los Angeles County Community Disaster Resilience Project (LACCDR), a public health program for increasing community disaster resilience. The LACCDR Project utilizes a pretest–posttest method with control group design. Sixteen communities in Los Angeles County were selected and randomly assigned to the experimental community resilience group or the comparison group. Community coalitions in the experimental group receive training from a public health nurse trained in community resilience in a toolkit developed for the project. The toolkit is grounded in theory and uses multiple components to address education, community engagement, community and individual self-sufficiency, and partnerships among community organizations and governmental agencies. The comparison communities receive training in traditional disaster preparedness topics of disaster supplies and emergency communication plans. Outcome indicators include longitudinal changes in inter-organizational linkages among community organizations, community member responses in table-top exercises, and changes in household level community resilience behaviors and attitudes. The LACCDR Project is a significant opportunity and effort to operationalize and meaningfully measure factors and strategies to increase community resilience. This paper is intended to provide public health and academic researchers with new tools to conduct their community resilience programs and evaluation research. Results are not yet available and will be presented in future reports.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
【 预 览 】
| Files | Size | Format | View |
|---|---|---|---|
| RO202003190022653ZK.pdf | 1141KB |
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