Lushaobo Shi , Dian Gao , Xingmin Wang , Jinhui Lin , Dongxue Chen , Ting Li , Yi Xia , Dong Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Technologies and processes that can reduce infectious disease spread are relatively well developed, but, how to implement these public health measures at the community level remains a challenge. Building community resilience is a way to address this challenge. This study aims to assess the impact of community resilience on community-level epidemic prevention effectiveness, along with residents’ participation in community-based epidemic prevention (RPCBEP) as a possible moderator of this association. To reflect the multidimensional nature of community resilience, we further screened key resilience factors affecting community epidemic prevention effectiveness and verified the moderating role of RPCBEP on the association between key resilience factors and community epidemic prevention effectiveness. A total of 2275 resident questionnaires from 110 communities of Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China, were collected in July–August 2022. Moderation analysis was performed using the Process 3.3 macro. The results showed that community resilience, in general, and the key factors of leadership and preparedness in particular were positively associated with community epidemic prevention effectiveness. Moreover, RPCBEP played a positive moderating role in all these associations. Our study has focused on the community effectiveness of the public health measures from community resilience and citizen participation, enriching the study of policy effectiveness in the context of public health crises. Our findings indicated that community epidemic prevention effectiveness not only requires systematic resilient capacity construction but is also closely related to the active participation behaviors of residents. Our results highlight the important role of community governance of a combination of “top-down” and “bottom-up” in epidemic prevention.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (IJDRR) is the journal for researchers, policymakers and practitioners across diverse disciplines: earth sciences and their implications; environmental sciences; engineering; urban studies; geography; and the social sciences. IJDRR publishes fundamental and applied research, critical reviews, policy papers and case studies with a particular focus on multi-disciplinary research that aims to reduce the impact of natural, technological, social and intentional disasters. IJDRR stimulates exchange of ideas and knowledge transfer on disaster research, mitigation, adaptation, prevention and risk reduction at all geographical scales: local, national and international.
Key topics:-
-multifaceted disaster and cascading disasters
-the development of disaster risk reduction strategies and techniques
-discussion and development of effective warning and educational systems for risk management at all levels
-disasters associated with climate change
-vulnerability analysis and vulnerability trends
-emerging risks
-resilience against disasters.
The journal particularly encourages papers that approach risk from a multi-disciplinary perspective.