| Literature DB >> 30051238 |
Christine Dominianni1, Munerah Ahmed2, Sarah Johnson2, Micheline Blum3, Kazuhiko Ito2, Kathryn Lane2.
Abstract
Power outages can impact health, and certain populations may be more at risk. Personal preparedness may reduce impacts, but information on power outage preparedness and risk perception among vulnerable populations is limited. We examined power outage preparedness and concern among New York City residents, including vulnerable populations defined as older adults (≥ 65 years), and respondents with household members who require assistance with daily activities or depend on electric medical devices. A random sample telephone survey was conducted during November-December 2016. Preparedness was defined as having a three-day supply of drinking water, non-perishable food, and a working flashlight. Among all respondents (n = 887), 58% were prepared and 46% expressed concern about health. Respondents with electric-dependent household members (9% of all respondents) tended to have higher preparedness (70 vs. 56% of respondents without electric-dependent household members). Among this group, only 40% reported being registered with a utility company to receive early notification of outages. While the subgroup sample was small, respondents with registered electric-dependent household members had lower preparedness than those with non-registered users (59 vs. 76%). Respondents with household members who needed assistance had comparable levels of preparedness to respondents without someone who needed assistance (59 vs. 57%). Older adults had greater preparedness than younger adults (65 vs. 56%). Health concerns were greater among all vulnerable groups than the general population. Levels of preparedness varied among vulnerable respondents, and awareness of power outage notification programs was low. Our findings highlight the need to increase awareness and preparedness among at-risk people.Entities:
Keywords: Climate change; Power outage; Preparedness; Vulnerable populations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30051238 PMCID: PMC6181821 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-018-0296-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Characteristics of survey respondents
| Unweighted | Weighted %a | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | 360 | 46 |
| Female | 507 | 53 | |
| Other | 10 | 1 | |
| Missing/refused | 10 | ||
| Age | 18–29 | 136 | 23 |
| 30–49 | 297 | 37 | |
| 50–64 | 230 | 23 | |
| 65+ | 207 | 17 | |
| Missing/refused | 17 | ||
| Race/Ethnicity | White, non-Hispanic | 332 | 34 |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 225 | 21 | |
| Hispanic | 161 | 28 | |
| Asian | 71 | 15 | |
| Something else | 40 | 3 | |
| Missing/refused | 58 | ||
| Household members | 1 | 173 | 12 |
| 2+ | 696 | 88 | |
| Missing/refused | 18 | ||
| Children < 12 years | 0 | 629 | 69 |
| 1+ | 250 | 31 | |
| Missing/refused | 8 | ||
| Household income | < $30,000 | 161 | 23 |
| $30,000 to < $50,000 | 155 | 15 | |
| $50,000 to < $100,000 | 179 | 28 | |
| ≥ $100,000 | 182 | 34 | |
| Missing/refused | 210 | ||
| Residence building type | One or two family home | 316 | 44 |
| Multi-family building | 508 | 56 | |
| Other/missing/refused | 63 |
aIndividual weights were used and missing data were not included in percentages
Frequency of preparedness and concern by survey respondent characteristics
| Perceiveda Prep. weighted % (95% CI)d | Actualb Prep. weighted % (95% CI)d | Healthc Concern weighted % (95% CI)d | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 46 (42, 50) | 58 (53, 62) | 46 (42, 50) |
| Race/Ethnicity | |||
| White, Non-Hispanic (ref) | 46 (39, 53) | 59 (52, 66) | 38 (32, 45) |
| Black, Non-Hispanic | 45 (37, 54) | 65 (56, 73) | 54 (46, 62)e |
| Hispanic | 50 (40, 60) | 45 (35, 56)e | 51 (42, 60)e |
| Asian | 41 (28, 55)f | 61 (45, 75)f | 43 (31, 57)f |
| Household income | |||
| ≥ $100,000 (ref) | 42 (34, 51) | 60 (51, 69) | 36 (28, 45) |
| $50,000 to < $100,000 | 40 (31, 50) | 58 (47, 68)f | 48 (39, 58)e |
| $30,000 to < $50,000 | 48 (38, 59)f | 53 (42, 64)f | 52 (42, 61)e |
| < $30,000 | 39 (29, 49)f | 45 (35, 57)e,f | 53 (43, 62)e |
| Residence building type | |||
| One or two family home (ref) | 46 (39, 54) | 63 (55, 70) | 49 (42, 56) |
| Multi-family building | 46 (40, 51) | 51 (45, 57)e | 44 (39, 50) |
| Children < 12 years | |||
| 0 (ref) | 50 (44, 55) | 63 (58, 68) | 45 (40, 50) |
| 1+ | 39 (31, 47)e | 44 (36, 53)e | 48 (41, 56) |
| Lost power in Superstorm Sandy | |||
| No (ref) | 47 (41, 52) | 57 (51, 62) | 46 (41, 51) |
| Yes | 46 (38, 54) | 62 (54, 69) | 46 (39, 54) |
aRespondents reporting their households were prepared for a power outage in NYC
bRespondents having a working flashlight, 3-day supply of food that would not spoil, and 3-day supply of drinking water
cRespondents reporting being very or somewhat concerned that power outages could cause injury or illness
dIndividual weights were used
eProportion significantly differed when compared to reference group (p ≤ 0.05)
fEstimate should be interpreted with caution. The 95% confidence interval half-width is > 10 or the sample size is < 50, making the estimate potentially unreliable
Overlap among different at-risk populations
| Total | Older adults | Household member needing assistance | Household member is electric-dependent | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unweighted N (weighted %a) | Weighted % (95% CI)a | Weighted % (95% CI)a | Weighted % (95% CI)a | |
| Older adults | ||||
| 65+ | 207 (17) | NA | 19 (14, 25) | 22 (13, 34)c |
| < 65 | 663 (83) | NA | 16 (13, 19) | 16 (14, 19) |
| Household member needing assistance | ||||
| Yes | 222 (25) | 29 (22, 37) | NA | 61 (47, 74)b, c |
| No | 656 (75) | 25 (21, 29) | NA | 22 (19, 26) |
| Household member is electric-dependent | ||||
| Yes | 77 (9) | 12 (7, 18)c | 21 (15, 30)b, c | NA |
| No | 807 (91) | 8 (6, 12) | 5 (3, 7) | NA |
aIndividual weights were used
bProportion significantly differed when compared to non-vulnerable groups (p ≤ 0.05)
cEstimate should be interpreted with caution. The sample size is < 50 making the estimate potentially unreliable
Characteristics, preparedness, and concern of older adults
| Weighted % (95% CI)a | Weighted % (95% CI)a | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 65+ years ( | < 65 years (ref, | 65+ years living alone (n = 91) | 65+ years not living alone (ref, | |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||||
| White, Non-Hispanic | 55 (47, 64)e | 30 (26, 34) | 53 (42, 65)f | 55 (44, 66) |
| Black, Non-Hispanic | 20 (15, 27)f | 21 (18, 25) | 22 (15, 32)f | 20 (13, 29) |
| Hispanic | 16 (10, 24)e,f | 30 (25, 35) | 19 (11, 32)f | 14 (7, 26) |
| Asian | 6 (3, 13)e,f | 17 (13, 21) | 3 (1, 13)f | 8 (3, 19) |
| Living alone | 37 (30, 45)e | 7 (6, 9) | NA | NA |
| Children < 12 years | 12 (7, 19)e,f | 35 (31, 40) | NA | NA |
| Household income < $50,000 | 39 (31, 48) | 38 (33, 43) | NA | NA |
| Multi-family building | 64 (56, 72)e | 54 (49, 59) | 78 (68, 86)e,f | 58 (46, 68) |
| Perceived preparednessb | 51 (42, 59) | 45 (40, 50) | 42 (31, 54)f | 57 (44, 68) |
| Actual preparednessc | 65 (56, 73) | 56 (50, 61) | 59 (46, 70)f | 68 (56, 78) |
| Getting Information | ||||
| Internet/website on mobile device, texts | 40 (32, 48)e | 63 (58, 67) | 47 (36, 59)f | 35 (25, 47) |
| Radio or battery operated television | 52 (43, 60)e | 31 (27, 36) | 45 (34, 57)f | 56 (44, 67) |
| Has health concernd | 54 (46, 62)e | 45 (40, 49) | 61 (50, 71)f | 49 (38, 60) |
aIndividual weights were used
bRespondents reporting their households were prepared for a power outage in NYC
cRespondents having a working flashlight, 3-day supply of food that would not spoil, and 3-day supply of drinking water
dRespondents reporting being very or somewhat concerned that power outages could cause injury or illness
eProportion of characteristics significantly differed when compared to non-vulnerable groups (p ≤ 0.05)
fEstimate should be interpreted with caution. Estimate’s relative standard error (a measure of estimate precision) is greater than 30%, the 95% confidence interval half-width is > 10, or the sample size is < 50, making the estimate potentially unreliable
Characteristics, preparedness, and concern of respondents with household members needing assistance
| Weighted % (95% CI)a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | No (ref, | |
| Race/Ethnicity | ||
| White, Non-Hispanice | 18 (13, 24) | 39 (35, 44) |
| Black, Non-Hispanic | 26 (20, 34) | 20 (16, 23) |
| Hispanice | 36 (28, 45) | 25 (21, 30) |
| Asianf | 16 (11, 24) | 14 (10, 19) |
| Living alonef | 9 (6, 14) | 13 (11, 16) |
| Children < 12 yearse | 43 (35, 51) | 28 (24, 32) |
| Household income < $50,000e | 57 (47, 66) | 32 (27, 37) |
| Multi-family buildinge | 67 (58, 74) | 52 (47, 56) |
| Perceived preparednessb | 44 (36, 53) | 46 (41, 52) |
| Actual preparednessc | 59 (49, 68) | 57 (52, 62) |
| Getting Information | ||
| Internet/website on mobile device, texts | 63 (55, 71) | 57 (52, 62) |
| Radio or battery operated television | 31 (24, 40) | 37 (32, 42) |
| Has health concernd,e | 65 (57, 73) | 39 (35, 44) |
aIndividual weights were used
bRespondents reporting their households were prepared for a power outage in NYC
cRespondents having a working flashlight, 3-day supply of food that would not spoil, and 3-day supply of drinking water
dRespondents reporting being very or somewhat concerned that power outages could cause injury or illness
eProportion of characteristics significantly differed when compared to non-vulnerable groups (p ≤ 0.05)
fEstimate should be interpreted with caution. The sample size is < 50 making the estimate potentially unreliable
Characteristics, preparedness, and concern of respondents with household members needing electric medical equipment
| weighted % (95% CI)a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | No (ref, | |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| White, Non-Hispanicf | 31 (20, 45) | 34 (30, 38) |
| Black, Non-Hispanicf | 17 (9, 30) | 22 (19, 26) |
| Hispanicf | 35 (22, 51) | 27 (23, 31) |
| Asianf | 13 (5, 30) | 14 (11, 18) |
| Living alonef | 11 (5, 20) | 13 (11, 15) |
| Children < 12 yearsf | 23 (13, 37) | 32 (28, 37) |
| Household income < $50,000e,f | 57 (41, 72) | 36 (32, 41) |
| Multi-family buildinge,f | 70 (55, 81) | 54 (50, 59) |
| Perceived preparednessb,e,f | 32 (20, 46) | 47 (42, 52) |
| Actual preparednessc,f | 70 (52, 83) | 56 (51, 61) |
| Getting information | ||
| Internet/website on mobile device, textsf | 70 (56, 81) | 58 (53, 62) |
| Radio or battery operated televisionf | 30 (19, 44) | 35 (31, 40) |
| Has health concernd,e,f | 74 (60, 85) | 44 (39, 48) |
aIndividual weights were used
bRespondents reporting their households were prepared for a power outage in NYC
cRespondents having a working flashlight, 3-day supply of food that would not spoil, and 3-day supply of drinking water
dRespondents reporting being very or somewhat concerned that power outages could cause injury or illness
eProportion of characteristics significantly differed when compared to non-vulnerable groups (p ≤ 0.05)
fEstimate should be interpreted with caution. Estimate’s relative standard error (a measure of estimate precision) is greater than 30%, the 95% confidence interval half-width is > 10, or the sample size is < 50, making the estimate potentially unreliable
Characteristics, preparedness, and concern between respondents with registered electric-dependent household members and respondents with non-registered electric-dependent household members
| Weighted % (95% CI)a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Registered ( | Non-registered (ref, | |
| Race/ethnicity | ||
| White, Non-Hispanicf | 33 (15, 58) | 32 (18, 50) |
| Otherf | 67 (42, 85) | 68 (50, 82) |
| Household income < $50,000f | 63 (35, 84) | 51 (32, 71) |
| Multi-family buildingf | 75 (49, 90) | 66 (47, 81) |
| Lost power in Superstorm Sandyf | 18 (8, 37) | 39 (22, 58) |
| Perceived preparednessb,f | 34 (16, 59) | 30 (16, 50) |
| Actual preparednessc,f | 59 (27, 85) | 76 (57, 89) |
| Getting Information | ||
| Internet/website on mobile device, textsf | 75 (52, 89) | 65 (45, 81) |
| Radio or battery operated televisionf | 25 (11, 48) | 35 (19, 55) |
| Has health concernd,e,f | 90 (73, 97)h | 68 (48, 83) |
aIndividual weights were used
bRespondents reporting their households were prepared for a power outage in NYC
cRespondents having a working flashlight, 3-day supply of food that would not spoil, and 3-day supply of drinking water
dRespondents reporting being very or somewhat concerned that power outages could cause injury or illness
eProportion of characteristics significantly differed when compared to non-registered respondents (p ≤ 0.05)
fAll estimates should be interpreted with caution. Estimate’s relative standard error (a measure of estimate precision) is greater than 30% or the sample size is too small (n < 50), making the estimate potentially unreliable