Influences of Preparedness Knowledge and Beliefs on Household Disaster Preparedness

Back to results
Author(s)
Thomas, T., Leander-Griffit, M.m Harp, V., & Cioffi, J.
Publication language
English
Pages
28pp
Date published
11 Sep 2015
Publisher
CDC
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Urban
Countries
United States of America

To determine the association between knowledge and beliefs and household preparedness, CDC analyzed baseline data from Ready CDC, a personal disaster preparedness interven-tion piloted among Atlanta- and Morgantown-based CDC staff members during 2013–2015. Compared with persons with basic preparedness knowledge, persons with advanced knowledge were more likely to have assembled an emergency kit (44% versus 17%), developed a written household disas-ter plan (9% versus 4%), and received county emergency alert notifications (63% versus 41%). Similarly, differences in household preparedness behaviors were correlated with beliefs about preparedness. Persons identified as having strong beliefs in the effectiveness of disaster preparedness engaged in preparedness behaviors at levels 7%–30% higher than those with weaker preparedness beliefs. Understanding the influences of knowledge and beliefs on household disaster preparedness might provide an opportunity to inform messages promoting household preparedness.