globalchange  > 气候变化与战略
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-020-04005-9
论文题名:
The Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake: Will emergency managers be willing and able to report to work?
作者: Swick Z.D.; Baker E.A.; Elliott M.; Zelicoff A.
刊名: Natural Hazards
ISSN: 0921030X
出版年: 2020
卷: 103, 期:1
起始页码: 659
结束页码: 683
语种: 英语
中文关键词: Ability/willingness to report to work ; Concept mapping ; Emergency managers
英文关键词: catastrophic event ; earthquake event ; hazard management ; mapping method ; participatory approach ; planning system ; subduction zone ; Cascadia Subduction Zone ; Oregon ; Pacific Ocean ; United States ; Washington [United States] ; Quercus
英文摘要: This study examines the factors that are likely to influence emergency managers’ willingness and ability to report to work after a catastrophic event using the Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake threat as an example. The population approached for participation in this study was state-level emergency managers in Oregon and Washington, the areas anticipated to be the most impacted by the Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake. Concept mapping was utilized to elucidate factors influencing emergency managers’ ability and willingness to report to work following a catastrophic earthquake, as well as to identify specific strategies for addressing these factors to facilitate reporting to work. The six-step concept mapping process (i.e., preparation, generation, structuring, representation, interpretation, and utilization) is a structured and integrated mixed-method process that employs both qualitative and quantitative components to gather ideas and concepts of participants, and subsequently produces visual representation of these ideas and concepts through multivariate statistical methods (Caracelli and Green in Eval ProgramPlan 12(1):45–52, 1993; Kane and Trochim in Concept mapping for planning and evaluation, Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks, 2007). Results influence across a wide range of the levels of the ecological framework for both ability (transit barriers and infrastructure impacts, family/pet health and safety, social support and preparedness, work-related influences, personal health and resources, professional obligations, and location) and willingness (family/community preparedness and safety, emergency management responsibility and professionalism, motivation to come to work, transit barriers and infrastructure impacts, professional contribution, physical and mental health, worksite operations: structure and process, family first, personal contribution and history). © 2020, The Author(s).
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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/168762
Appears in Collections:气候变化与战略

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作者单位: Institute of Emergency Management, Idaho State University, 1311 E. Central Drive, Meridian, ID 83642, United States; Saint Louis University, College for Public Health and Social Justice, 3545 Lafayette Ave, St. Louis, MO 63104, United States

Recommended Citation:
Swick Z.D.,Baker E.A.,Elliott M.,et al. The Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake: Will emergency managers be willing and able to report to work?[J]. Natural Hazards,2020-01-01,103(1)
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