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Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model

BACKGROUND: Local public health agencies play a central role in response to an influenza pandemic, and understanding the willingness of their employees to report to work is therefore a critically relevant concern for pandemic influenza planning efforts. Witte's Extended Parallel Process Model (...

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Autores principales: Barnett, Daniel J., Balicer, Ran D., Thompson, Carol B., Storey, J. Douglas, Omer, Saad B., Semon, Natalie L., Bayer, Steve, Cheek, Lorraine V., Gateley, Kerry W., Lanza, Kathryn M., Norbin, Jane A., Slemp, Catherine C., Links, Jonathan M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2711331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19629188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006365
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author Barnett, Daniel J.
Balicer, Ran D.
Thompson, Carol B.
Storey, J. Douglas
Omer, Saad B.
Semon, Natalie L.
Bayer, Steve
Cheek, Lorraine V.
Gateley, Kerry W.
Lanza, Kathryn M.
Norbin, Jane A.
Slemp, Catherine C.
Links, Jonathan M.
author_facet Barnett, Daniel J.
Balicer, Ran D.
Thompson, Carol B.
Storey, J. Douglas
Omer, Saad B.
Semon, Natalie L.
Bayer, Steve
Cheek, Lorraine V.
Gateley, Kerry W.
Lanza, Kathryn M.
Norbin, Jane A.
Slemp, Catherine C.
Links, Jonathan M.
author_sort Barnett, Daniel J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Local public health agencies play a central role in response to an influenza pandemic, and understanding the willingness of their employees to report to work is therefore a critically relevant concern for pandemic influenza planning efforts. Witte's Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM) has been found useful for understanding adaptive behavior in the face of unknown risk, and thus offers a framework for examining scenario-specific willingness to respond among local public health workers. We thus aim to use the EPPM as a lens for examining the influences of perceived threat and efficacy on local public health workers' response willingness to pandemic influenza. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We administered an online, EPPM-based survey about attitudes/beliefs toward emergency response (Johns Hopkins∼Public Health Infrastructure Response Survey Tool), to local public health employees in three states between November 2006 – December 2007. A total of 1835 responses were collected for an overall response rate of 83%. With some regional variation, overall 16% of the workers in 2006-7 were not willing to “respond to a pandemic flu emergency regardless of its severity”. Local health department employees with a perception of high threat and high efficacy – i.e., those fitting a ‘concerned and confident’ profile in the EPPM analysis – had the highest declared rates of willingness to respond to an influenza pandemic if required by their agency, which was 31.7 times higher than those fitting a ‘low threat/low efficacy’ EPPM profile. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In the context of pandemic influenza planning, the EPPM provides a useful framework to inform nuanced understanding of baseline levels of – and gaps in – local public health workers' response willingness. Within local health departments, ‘concerned and confident’ employees are most likely to be willing to respond. This finding may allow public health agencies to design, implement, and evaluate training programs focused on emergency response attitudes in health departments.
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spelling pubmed-27113312009-07-24 Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model Barnett, Daniel J. Balicer, Ran D. Thompson, Carol B. Storey, J. Douglas Omer, Saad B. Semon, Natalie L. Bayer, Steve Cheek, Lorraine V. Gateley, Kerry W. Lanza, Kathryn M. Norbin, Jane A. Slemp, Catherine C. Links, Jonathan M. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Local public health agencies play a central role in response to an influenza pandemic, and understanding the willingness of their employees to report to work is therefore a critically relevant concern for pandemic influenza planning efforts. Witte's Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM) has been found useful for understanding adaptive behavior in the face of unknown risk, and thus offers a framework for examining scenario-specific willingness to respond among local public health workers. We thus aim to use the EPPM as a lens for examining the influences of perceived threat and efficacy on local public health workers' response willingness to pandemic influenza. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We administered an online, EPPM-based survey about attitudes/beliefs toward emergency response (Johns Hopkins∼Public Health Infrastructure Response Survey Tool), to local public health employees in three states between November 2006 – December 2007. A total of 1835 responses were collected for an overall response rate of 83%. With some regional variation, overall 16% of the workers in 2006-7 were not willing to “respond to a pandemic flu emergency regardless of its severity”. Local health department employees with a perception of high threat and high efficacy – i.e., those fitting a ‘concerned and confident’ profile in the EPPM analysis – had the highest declared rates of willingness to respond to an influenza pandemic if required by their agency, which was 31.7 times higher than those fitting a ‘low threat/low efficacy’ EPPM profile. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In the context of pandemic influenza planning, the EPPM provides a useful framework to inform nuanced understanding of baseline levels of – and gaps in – local public health workers' response willingness. Within local health departments, ‘concerned and confident’ employees are most likely to be willing to respond. This finding may allow public health agencies to design, implement, and evaluate training programs focused on emergency response attitudes in health departments. Public Library of Science 2009-07-24 /pmc/articles/PMC2711331/ /pubmed/19629188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006365 Text en Barnett et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Barnett, Daniel J.
Balicer, Ran D.
Thompson, Carol B.
Storey, J. Douglas
Omer, Saad B.
Semon, Natalie L.
Bayer, Steve
Cheek, Lorraine V.
Gateley, Kerry W.
Lanza, Kathryn M.
Norbin, Jane A.
Slemp, Catherine C.
Links, Jonathan M.
Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title_full Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title_fullStr Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title_short Assessment of Local Public Health Workers' Willingness to Respond to Pandemic Influenza through Application of the Extended Parallel Process Model
title_sort assessment of local public health workers' willingness to respond to pandemic influenza through application of the extended parallel process model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2711331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19629188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0006365
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