Technical Papers
Apr 5, 2024

Positive Psychological Predictors of Preparedness for Tornadoes, Structural Fires, and Large-Scale Disease Outbreaks: A Study of US University Students and Employees

Publication: Natural Hazards Review
Volume 25, Issue 3

Abstract

Individuals often underestimate disaster risk and overestimate their own preparedness, even for disasters they have experienced. Considering the varied effects of prior disaster exposure on preparedness, the psychological trauma literature can inform models of preparedness among hazard survivors. Posttraumatic growth (PTG), or positive changes after a stressor, could explain how some, but not all, disaster survivors come to value and engage in preparedness. University students and employees (N=1,113) in a tornado-prone region of the United States were surveyed from 2015 to 2016 about preparedness for tornadoes, structural fires, and large-scale disease outbreaks. For each hazard type, they reported perceived likelihood, self-efficacy responding to the hazard, how much they valued preparedness, and their prior exposure to the hazard. Tornado survivors (N=661) were further asked how many tornadoes they had experienced, the severity of the impact (e.g., injured, lost electricity), and their perceived PTG from tornadoes. Comparing each variable by hazard type, perceived likelihood, and prior exposure were greater for tornadoes compared with disease and fire. For tornado survivors, PTG mediated the effect of tornado severity on both preparedness and valuing preparedness. In conclusion, PTG is a process by which disaster experiences result in increased disaster preparedness. Simply experiencing a disaster, even a severe one, does not necessarily instill disaster preparedness as a value; however, positive change in recovery from a severe disaster involves caring more about preparedness and becoming increasingly prepared. Enhanced disaster preparedness is not an inevitable outcome of disaster exposure, but it is a potential outcome of psychological recovery from disaster trauma. Integrating the present findings, the preparedness literature, and the psychological trauma literature, we propose an integrated individual-level disaster resilience cycle model.

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Data Availability Statement

Some or all data, models, or code generated or used during the study are available in a repository online in accordance with funder data retention policies (Weber et al. 2023a).

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by funding from the Office of the Provost, The University of Mississippi. We are also grateful for input from the University of Mississippi Incident Response Team. The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the official positions of the United States Government, Department of Veterans Affairs, or the academic affiliates.

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Natural Hazards Review
Volume 25Issue 3August 2024

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Received: May 10, 2023
Accepted: Nov 8, 2023
Published online: Apr 5, 2024
Published in print: Aug 1, 2024
Discussion open until: Sep 5, 2024

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Clinician Investigator, South Central Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, 2200 Fort Roots Dr., 116P/NLR, North Little Rock, AR 72114; Instructor, Psychiatric Research Institute, Univ. of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301 W. Markham St., #755, Little Rock, AR 72205 (corresponding author). ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1650-9074. Email: [email protected]
Doctoral Student, Dept. of Psychology and The Clinical-Disaster Research Center, Univ. of Mississippi, Kinard Hall Suite 203, Oxford, MS 38677-1848. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1457-7372. Email: [email protected]
Stefan E. Schulenberg, Ph.D. [email protected]
Professor, Dept. of Psychology and Director, Clinical-Disaster Research Center (UM-CDRC), Univ. of Mississippi, Kinard Hall Suite 203, Oxford, MS 38677-1848. Email: [email protected]

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