| Literature DB >> 33918651 |
Kylie Mason1, Kirstin Lindberg1, Carolin Haenfling1, Allan Schori1, Helene Marsters1, Deborah Read1, Barry Borman1.
Abstract
Social vulnerability indicators are a valuable tool for understanding which population groups are more vulnerable to experiencing negative impacts from disasters, and where these groups live, to inform disaster risk management activities. While many approaches have been used to measure social vulnerability to natural hazards, there is no single method or universally agreed approach. This paper proposes a novel approach to developing social vulnerability indicators, using the example of flooding in Aotearoa New Zealand. A conceptual framework was developed to guide selection of the social vulnerability indicators, based on previous frameworks (including the MOVE framework), consideration of climate change, and a holistic view of health and wellbeing. Using this framework, ten dimensions relating to social vulnerability were identified: exposure; children; older adults; health and disability status; money to cope with crises/losses; social connectedness; knowledge, skills and awareness of natural hazards; safe, secure and healthy housing; food and water to cope with shortage; and decision making and participation. For each dimension, key indicators were identified and implemented, mostly using national Census population data. After development, the indicators were assessed by end users using a case study of Porirua City, New Zealand, then implemented for the whole of New Zealand. These indicators will provide useful data about social vulnerability to floods in New Zealand, and these methods could potentially be adapted for other jurisdictions and other natural hazards, including those relating to climate change.Entities:
Keywords: disaster; flooding; health; indicators; natural hazards; resilience; social vulnerability
Year: 2021 PMID: 33918651 PMCID: PMC8069610 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18083952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Map of Porirua City, with flood hazard zones and 2013 area unit boundaries. Note: Flood hazard zones give the flood hazard for a 1-in-100 year flood event. These hazard zones account for 100 year climate change impacts, in terms of sea level risk and increased rainfall. The models have used 1 metre sea-level rise and a 20% increased rainfall. The models were prepared by Wellington Water. Sources: ESRI, NASA, NGA, USGS, OpenStreetMap, Statistics New Zealand, Wellington Water, Porirua City Council.
Figure 2Social vulnerability indicator development process (adapted from Mason et al. [52]).
Selection criteria for selecting social vulnerability indicators.
| Type | Selection Criteria | Details for the Social Vulnerability Indicators |
|---|---|---|
| Data sources | Data availability | Data need to be currently available; not too much work required to extract data |
| Methodologically sound measurement | Data source needs to be reliable, accurate, and representative of the population; minimal bias and/or undercounting | |
| Able to be disaggregated | Data need to be available at a local level (neighbourhoods if possible) | |
| Timely | Data need to be collected and reported frequently, so that data are not too out of date | |
| Measurement of indicators | Intelligible and easily interpretable | Indicators should be not too complex to understand, and should be able to be understood by a wide range of end users |
| Methodologically sound measurement | Indicator definition and measurement needs to be robust, and should measure some aspect of the social vulnerability dimension | |
| Consistent with other indicator programmes | Indicators would ideally align with other indicator datasets already being used by end users | |
| Sensitive to change | Indicators are sensitive to change, so that they are measuring the current situation | |
| Comparable over time | Less of a priority for social vulnerability indicators, although ideally indicators can be interpreted in similar ways over time | |
| Indicator relevance and appropriateness | Scientifically valid | Robust evidence needed for why the indicators are important (given the conceptual framework) |
| Public health impact | Indicators need to relate to an issue of significant public health impact for the country; if numbers are too low nationally for an indicator, the indicator may not be very helpful. |
Figure 3Conceptual framework for social vulnerability to natural hazards (own figure, based on conceptual models by Birkmann et al. [33], USGCRP [17], Wisner et al. [46,55] and Durie [57]).
Dimensions of social vulnerability to natural hazards, and their rationale [16,17,23,24,25,61,62].
| Social Vulnerability Dimension | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Exposure | Includes population groups exposed through direct impacts (such as living in a flood hazard zone), indirect impacts (such as through disruption to essential infrastructure and services, road transport networks, public transport, power supplies), and occupational exposure. |
| Children | Children rely on caregivers to protect them, and they may not understand the hazard or how to best react to it. Children are also more susceptible to certain health impacts, as they are still growing and developing. |
| Older adults | Older adults often have pre-existing health conditions, and may be less mobile and/or have vision or hearing loss. They may also experience social isolation. |
| People with health needs and/or disability | People with existing physical or mental health needs can be susceptible to the stress and physical impacts of natural hazard events, and may also be adversely impacted by disruptions to health services or medications. People with disabilities may need others to help them, and may have difficulties accessing emergency shelters. |
| Enough money to cope with crises and losses | People with low or no household income may not be able to afford preparedness measures (such as insurance, stockpiling food, medications and other resources), or be able to replace items after a natural hazard. |
| Social connectedness | Social isolation can leave people more vulnerable, as they may not have others to help them when needed. By contrast, strong social connections and support can provide resilience through networks and shared resources. |
| Knowledge, skills and awareness to face hazards | People are more vulnerable if they are not aware of hazards, not able to access information, or do not know how to prepare or react during a hazard event. Having knowledge, skills and awareness of hazards allows people to better prepare for and cope during a natural hazard. |
| Safe, secure and healthy housing | Shelter, warmth and security are basic human needs. People living in substandard housing, or in overcrowded housing, have increased risk of experiencing negative impacts of natural hazards, and may find it difficult to cope and recover. |
| Food and water to cope with shortage | Having sufficient food and water is a basic human need. After a natural hazard, having access to these resources (e.g., through household preparedness) is an important source of resilience. Not having enough emergency food (or enough food on a daily basis) or water (e.g., piped water) leaves people more vulnerable after a natural hazard. |
| Decision making and participation | Good leadership and decision making are vitally important before, during and after a natural hazard. Furthermore, people’s ability to access and participate in decision making, and the inclusion of a diverse range of people in decision making (especially vulnerable population groups and marginalised groups), is important for ensuring their needs are met in emergency management planning. Lack of involvement or inclusion in decision making can increase people’s vulnerability, as it means their needs may not be met or planned for through mitigation plans. |
Social vulnerability dimensions and indicators for flooding for New Zealand.
| Dimension of Social Vulnerability | Social Vulnerability Indicators |
|---|---|
| Exposure (direct) | Number of people |
| Exposure (indirect) | People who commute outside of the area |
| Exposure (occupational) | Health care workers and first responders |
| Children | Children aged 0–4 years |
| Older adults | People aged 65+ years |
| Health and disability | Pregnant women (proxy used of babies aged <1 year) |
| Having enough money to cope with crises/losses | Socioeconomic deprivation (NZDep2013 deciles) [ |
| Social connectedness | People who are new to the neighbourhood (within previous year) |
| Knowledge, skills, and awareness of natural hazards | People who are new to the neighbourhood (within previous year) |
| Safe, secure and healthy housing | Households living in rental housing |
| Enough food and water (and other essentials) to survive | Households living in rental housing |
| Decision making and participation | Voter turnout in Local Authority elections * |
* Data were only available at the territorial authority level. Note: Further indicator details are available in Appendix B.
Figure 4Social vulnerability indicators heatmap for Porirua City (2013 data by area unit (AU)) (more vulnerable areas are coloured darker) (screenshot). Note: .C denotes suppressed values due to low numbers. For the social connectedness indicator of households with child(ren) aged 5–16 years, higher values mean lower vulnerability, so lower values have been coloured darker.
Figure 5Screenshot of the online interactive map (Story Map) of social vulnerability indicators for Porirua, showing NZDep2013 at the meshblock level.
Figure 6Screenshot of the online interactive map (Story Map) of flood hazard zones and school locations for Waitangirua, Porirua. Note: Flood hazard zones show 1-in-100 year flood extents, accounting for 100 year climate change impacts. Source: Wellington Water, Porirua City Council.
Previous sets of international social vulnerability indicators, by social vulnerability dimension.
| Social Vulnerability Dimensions | Social Vulnerability Indicators for Natural Hazards | Social Vulnerability Indicators for Flooding | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SoVI [ | Social Determinants of Vulnerability Framework [ | Social Vulnerability Index for Disaster Management [ | MOVE Framework for Cologne Flood Vulnerability [ | Urban Municipality Flood Vulnerability Index [ | Social Flood Vulnerability Index (Flood Hazard Research Centre) [ | |
| Exposure | Occupation | Number of people living in flood-prone areas | Location of dwellings in low-lying coastal zone | |||
| Children and older adults | Age | Children | 0–17 years | Age structure (inability to evacuate) | Children (<15 years) | Residents aged 75+ years |
| Health and disability status | People with disabilities | People with a disability | Invalid (inability to evacuate) | Percent disabled | Long-term sick—mobility problems (restriction in daily activities due to long-term illness, handicap or chronic disease) | |
| Having enough money | Personal wealth | Low-to-no income | Living below poverty line | Households with insurance against flood damages | Equivalised household income | Financially deprived people |
| Social connectedness | Social isolation | Single parents | Single parents | |||
| Knowledge, skills and awareness of hazards | Limited English proficiency | Minority groups | Duration of residence (experience with floods) | % with mobile phone | ||
| Safe housing | Housing stock and tenancy | Renters | Multi-unit structures | % owner occupier | Overcrowding | |
| Enough food and water | % of households with piped drinking water | |||||
| Other individual-level (exposure/decision making) | Race—African American, Asian | People of colour | Minority groups | |||
| Outside of framework (structural/contextual) | Density of the built environment | Living in group quarters | Performance of early warning system | Housing/land use plan indicating flood-prone areas | ||
Previous sets of social vulnerability indicators in New Zealand, by social vulnerability dimension.
| Social Vulnerability Dimensions | Indicator Sets for Social Vulnerability | Indicator Sets for Resilience | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SVIs for Earthquakes in NZ (main set) [ | Vulnerability Assessment for the Hutt Valley [ | New Zealand Resilience Index (NZRI) [ | Bottom-up Approach for Neighbourhood-Based Resilience Framework [ | |
| Exposure | Population density | People not working in primary sector | ||
| Children and older adults | Children living in married couple families | Children aged 0–4 years | ||
| Health and disability status | Population living in nursing and skilled-nursing facilities | Population on sickness benefit | Hospitalisation rates | Pre-existing and post-disaster mental and emotional health of individuals |
| Having enough money | Poverty | Single parents | People working in fulltime employment | Financial health of individuals, households and the neighbourhood |
| Social connectedness | Female-headed households | Single parents | Voluntary work | Collective efficacy |
| Knowledge, skills and awareness of hazards | Non-European | No telecommunications access | Long-term residency | Awareness of hazard risks |
| Safe housing | People per unit | Population per dwelling | Number of emergency shelters per 1000 people | Structural integrity of buildings and infrastructure |
| Enough food and water | % of households with emergency water for three days | Personal responsibility for self-protection (e.g., disaster preparedness) | ||
| Other individual-level (exposure/decision making) | Female | Females | ||
| Outside of framework (structural/contextual) | Hospitals per capita | Economic sector diversity | Neighbourhood space and amenities | |
Social vulnerability indicators for flooding in New Zealand, full list, 2013 indicators.
| Dimension of Social Vulnerability | Social Vulnerability Indicators | Data Source | Indicator Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exposure (direct) | Number of people | 2013 Census | Usually resident population |
| Number of households | 2013 Census | Number of households | |
| Ethnic groups: (European, Māori, Pacific peoples, Asian, Middle Eastern/Latin American/African (MELAA) | 2013 Census | Total response ethnic groups | |
| Exposure (indirect) | People who regularly commute outside of the area | 2013 Census | People with a work address located in different territorial authority (TA) to residential address |
| People who use public transport to get to and from work | 2013 Census | People who used public transport (train, bus, ferry) to get to work on Census day | |
| People living in rural or remote communities | 2013 Census | People living in a rural centre or rural area | |
| Exposure (occupational) | People working in the primary industries | 2013 Census | People working in agriculture, forestry or fishing |
| Health care workers and first responders | 2013 Census | People working in health care and social assistance, police services, fire protection and other emergency services, and ambulance serivces | |
| Children | Children aged 0–4 years | 2013 Census | |
| Older adults | People aged 65+ years | 2013 Census | |
| Physical health needs | People with a pre-existing health condition (including heart disease, diabetes, high cholesterol, respiratory conditions, immunosuppression) | To be developed | |
| People requiring essential medications or health services (such as angina medication, insulin, inhalers, epilepsy medication, immunosuppressant drugs, anti-HIV drugs, dialysis, home oxygen therapy cancer treatment) | To be developed | ||
| Pregnant women | 2013 Census | Proxy indicator used: Children aged <1 year | |
| Mental health needs | People accessing mental health services in the past year | To be developed | |
| People requiring essential medication for mental illness (anti-depressants, anti-anxiety medication, anti-psychotics, opioid substitution treatment) | To be developed | ||
| People with substance abuse issues | To be developed | ||
| Disability | People with a disability (mobility, hearing, vision, learning/language, limited intellectual skills) | To be developed | |
| Having enough money to cope with crises/losses | Socioeconomic deprivation | Atkinson et al. [ | New Zealand Index of Deprivation 2013 (NZDep2013) deciles |
| Single-parent households | 2013 Census | Households with one parent with child(ren) | |
| Unemployed | 2013 Census | People who were unemployed, among those aged 15+ years | |
| Not in labour force | 2013 Census | People who were not in the labour force, among those aged 15+ years | |
| People with minimal education | 2013 Census | People with no qualification, among those aged 15+ years | |
| Households with no access to car | 2013 Census | Households with no motor vehicle | |
| Social connectedness | People who are new to the neighbourhood (e.g., within previous year) | 2013 Census | Years at usual residence <1 year |
| Older adults living alone | 2013 Census | Adults aged 65+ years living in a single-person household | |
| Single-parent households | 2013 Census | Households with a single parent and dependent children | |
| Single-person households | 2013 Census | Households with only one person | |
| Households living in rental housing | 2013 Census | Dwellings not owned and not held in family trust | |
| Neighbourhoods with fewer households with children | 2013 Census | Households with one or more children* | |
| Recent immigrants | 2013 Census | People who moved to New Zealand recently (<1 year, <2 years) | |
| Knowledge, skills, and awareness of natural hazards | People who are new to the neighbourhood (within previous year) | 2013 Census | Years at usual residence <1 year |
| Households with no access to a mobile phone | 2013 Census | Households that did not have access to a mobile phone | |
| Households with no access to the internet | 2013 Census | Households that did not have access to the internet | |
| People with limited English proficiency | 2013 Census | People who reported not speaking English | |
| Recent immigrants | 2013 Census | People who moved to New Zealand recently (<1 year, <2 years) | |
| Safe, secure and healthy housing | Households living in rental housing | 2013 Census | Dwellings not owned and not held in family trust |
| Crowded households | 2013 Census | Households that needed 1+ bedrooms, according to the Canadian National Occupancy Standard | |
| People living in crowded households | 2013 Census | People living in households that needed 1+ bedrooms, according to the Canadian National Occupancy Standard | |
| People in severe housing deprivation (homelessness) | Amore et al. 2016 [ | People who were severely housing deprived (or homeless) in 2013 | |
| Enough food and water (and other essentials) to survive | Households living in rental housing | 2013 Census | Dwellings not owned and not held in family trust |
| Single-parent households | 2013 Census | Households with a single parent and dependent children | |
| Socioeconomic deprivation | Atkinson et al. [ | New Zealand Index of Deprivation 2013 (NZDep2013) deciles | |
| Decision making and participation | Voter turnout in local elections | NZ Department of Internal Affairs | Residential voter turnout in the 2016 Local Body elections * |
* Indicator relates to positive impact, so higher values should be interpreted as lower vulnerability. For all other indicators, higher values relate to higher vulnerability.
Point locations relating to social vulnerability for flooding for New Zealand.
| Dimension of Social Vulnerability | Point Locations Examples |
|---|---|
| Exposure (direct) | Emergency shelters |
| Exposure (indirect) | Main/arterial roads |
| Children | Schools |
| Older adults | Rest homes |
| Physical health needs | Primary health care facilities |
| Mental health needs | Mental health services |
| Disability | Community residential homes |
| Having enough money to cope with crises/losses | Social housing |
| Social connectedness | Schools |
| Knowledge, skills, and awareness of natural hazards | Visitor accommodation, such as motels, hotels, camping grounds |
| Safe, secure and healthy housing | Houses in flood hazard zones |
| Enough food and water (and other essentials) to survive | Food stores |
| Decision making and participation | Marae |
| Group quarters and/or institutions (related to housing) | Prisons and youth justice facilities |