| Literature DB >> 30678041 |
Mallory Kennedy1, Shannon Gonick2, Hendrika Meischke3, Janelle Rios4, Nicole A Errett5,6.
Abstract
Disaster recovery provides an opportunity to build healthier and more resilient communities. However, opportunities and challenges encountered by local health departments (LHDs) when integrating health considerations into recovery have yet to be explored. Following Hurricane Harvey, 17 local health and emergency management officials from 10 agencies in impacted Texas, USA jurisdictions were interviewed to describe the types and level of LHD engagement in disaster recovery planning and implementation and the extent to which communities leveraged recovery to build healthier, more resilient communities. Interviews were conducted between December 2017 and January 2018 and focused on if and how their communities were incorporating public health considerations into the visioning, planning, implementation, and assessment phases of disaster recovery. Using a combined inductive and deductive approach, we thematically analyzed interview notes and/or transcripts. LHDs reported varied levels of engagement and participation in activities to support their community's recovery. However, we found that LHDs rarely articulated or informed decision makers about the health impacts of recovery activities undertaken by other sectors. LHDs would benefit from additional resources, support, and technical assistance designed to facilitate working across sectors and building resilience during recovery.Entities:
Keywords: disaster recovery; public health; resilience
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30678041 PMCID: PMC6388212 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16030299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Strategic planning phases of disaster recovery, adapted from the NAM report [10].
| Phase | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Visioning | Community engages stakeholders via a “broad-based”, inclusive process to develop a vision of a healthy community that can be incorporated into disaster-related planning and implementation [ |
| Assessment | Assessment provides insight into the community’s “current status and desired state” in terms of health, hazard vulnerability, and other resilience-related factors |
| Planning | Diverse sectors and community stakeholders work together to incorporate health considerations into planning activities |
| Implementation | Community stakeholders and actors employ a “collaborative approach” to recovery that is anchored in the vision of a healthy community |
Number of respondents by position.
| Number of Respondents | Positions |
|---|---|
| 5 | Health Department Director |
| 4 | Public Health Emergency Preparedness Coordinator |
| 2 | Other Health Department Leadership |
| 1 | Emergency Management Coordinator |
| 1 | Epidemiologist |
| 1 | Public Health Nurse |
| 1 | Staff Analyst |
| 1 | Communications Staff |
| 1 | Purchasing/Finance Staff |
Key collaborators and activities.
| Partner Organization(s) | Activities |
|---|---|
| Emergency management | response planning, including shelter plan drills; response implementation, including coordinating mass vaccination clinic; communicating with the public; creating long-term recovery group |
| Other local government agencies (e.g., law enforcement, mosquito control, Roads and Bridges, county mental health agencies, environmental health, flood agencies, social services, purchasing) | response planning, including developing and sharing list of individuals with functional and access needs and evacuation planning; response implementation, including triaging patients; hotwashes and after-action reviews; recovery planning; recovery implementation, including vector control, providing mental health support to community members, disseminating mental health-related messages, providing data to inform public health recovery purchasing, identifying community needs; resource allocation |
| Local decision-makers (e.g., judge, Commissioner’s Court, elected officials) | providing resources; response planning; response implementation; recovery planning and decision-making, including around vector control; recovery implementation; identifying community needs |
| State and federal partners | response implementation, including evacuation; resource allocation; discussing recovery-related challenges; conducting hotwashes and after-action workshops; sharing information |
| Schools and academic institutions | response planning, including identifying individuals with functional and access needs; response implementation, including mass vaccination clinics; assessment, including assisting with cot-to-cot surveys in shelters |
| Community Recovery Group (comprised of private sector, local nonprofits, governmental entities, faith-based organizations, schools, and other entities) | identifying community needs; recovery planning, including attempts to minimize recovery activity duplication; sharing information and resources; hosting community meetings; recovery implementation, including mental health counseling; assessment, including home assessments |
| Foundations, nonprofits, community-based organizations, and non-governmental organizations (e.g., American Red Cross, United Way, Medical Reserve Corps, legal aid organizations, workforce development programs) | response implementation, including shelter operations; serving as fiduciary agent for recovery group; providing recovery funding; recovery planning, including coordinating recovery collaborative group; recovery implementation, including mold remediation, mold education and outreach, alerting the community of contractor fraud, hosting a pop-up shop for basic needs, case management, providing mental health services, providing home cleanout kits and improvement tools; conducting Community Assessment for Public Health Emergency Response (CASPER) |
| Healthcare partners (e.g., nursing homes, dialysis centers, hospitals; healthcare coalitions) | response planning, including assessing healthcare system readiness and ensuring healthcare facilities remain open during the disaster; response implementation, including evacuation; providing funding for health-related supplies and equipment |