Dec 18 2009
FINDINGS: Historically, authorities have used broad media campaigns to encourage the public to prepare for disasters - an approach that has proven largely ineffective. For this new study, UCLA researchers sought to test novel, culturally tailored, informal social networking approaches to improve disaster preparedness, using data on 231 Hispanics in Los Angeles County.
Researchers randomly assigned study participants to attend pl-ticas - discussion groups led by a lay health teacher - or to receive culturally tailored mailers encouraging them to store bottled water and food and devise a family communication plan in preparation for a disaster. They found that 93.3 percent of pl-tica participants who did not have water at the beginning did so at follow-up, compared with 66.7 percent of those who received mailers; 91.7 percent of the pl-tica group stored food, compared with 60.6 percent of mailer recipients; and 70.4 percent of pl-tica participants had a family communication plan, compared with 42.3 percent of mailer recipients.
IMPACT: This study is the first to use sophisticated techniques to improve disaster preparedness among Hispanics. It shows that lay health teachers who engage people inside their social networks and use culturally tailored content were more effective than mailers at encouraging participants to stockpile water and food and create a family communication plan.
Source:
University of California - Los Angeles