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16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement

ABSTRACT IMPACT: Working alongside news staff as community partners is feasible for community engagement to co-create a post-hurricane health assessment and connect it to our academic health center’s disaster response capacity. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Successful academic-community partnership in post-disa...

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Autores principales: Stevens, Kathleen R., Judson, Mary, Parker, Dan, Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett, Lee, Wendy, Reistetter, Timothy, Vasquez, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827916/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.607
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author Stevens, Kathleen R.
Judson, Mary
Parker, Dan
Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett
Lee, Wendy
Reistetter, Timothy
Vasquez, David
author_facet Stevens, Kathleen R.
Judson, Mary
Parker, Dan
Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett
Lee, Wendy
Reistetter, Timothy
Vasquez, David
author_sort Stevens, Kathleen R.
collection PubMed
description ABSTRACT IMPACT: Working alongside news staff as community partners is feasible for community engagement to co-create a post-hurricane health assessment and connect it to our academic health center’s disaster response capacity. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Successful academic-community partnership in post-disaster response depends on shared understanding of impact. Community newspapers could provide valuable insight into health needs and inform strategic recovery plans. Our objective was to determine methodological feasibility of using newspaper stories to identify post-disaster needs. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Community-Based Participatory Research principles were applied to engage newspaper staff and conduct qualitative analysis of stories published in the weekly Port Aransas South Jetty newspaper, serving this small rural coastal community. Using directed content analysis, the team derived and validated constructs from Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and Phases of Disaster models to create a codebook. Scientists and newspaper staff examined the codebook for congruency regarding interpretation and themes. With copyright permission to access online newspaper files, NVivo software was used to search for Hurricane Harvey-related terms (e.g., ‘Harvey, tropical storm, flood, damage, volunteer’). Stories from 3 days post-Harvey to 6 months post-Harvey were examined and again at anniversary date. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: The weekly South Jetty newspaper was published continuously from August 31, 2017, through the date our study ended, February 22, 2018. Analysis showed themes of the storm and community response to disaster at multiple levels. Harvey caused catastrophic flooding, destruction, on par with 2005 Hurricane Katrina as the costliest storm on record. In Port Aransas, 130 mph winds and a 12-foot storm surge damaged 90% of the buildings. Stories reflected Phases of Response: Pre-disaster, Impact, Heroic, Honeymoon, Disillusionment, and initial phases of Reconstruction and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Story: ‘It’s not just the physical part of Port Aransas that was hurt by the hurricane. Harvey also wounded the town’s collective psyche. We’ve wept for our losses, then counted our blessings, then wept for our losses again.’ DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: Newspapers were a rich source of post-disaster data. Text and pictures were poignant. Thematic analysis identified stages of recovery. Working alongside news staff as community partners is feasible for community engagement to co-create a post-hurricane health assessment and connect it to our academic health center’s disaster response capacity.
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spelling pubmed-88279162022-02-28 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement Stevens, Kathleen R. Judson, Mary Parker, Dan Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett Lee, Wendy Reistetter, Timothy Vasquez, David J Clin Transl Sci Health Equity & Community Engagement ABSTRACT IMPACT: Working alongside news staff as community partners is feasible for community engagement to co-create a post-hurricane health assessment and connect it to our academic health center’s disaster response capacity. OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Successful academic-community partnership in post-disaster response depends on shared understanding of impact. Community newspapers could provide valuable insight into health needs and inform strategic recovery plans. Our objective was to determine methodological feasibility of using newspaper stories to identify post-disaster needs. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Community-Based Participatory Research principles were applied to engage newspaper staff and conduct qualitative analysis of stories published in the weekly Port Aransas South Jetty newspaper, serving this small rural coastal community. Using directed content analysis, the team derived and validated constructs from Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and Phases of Disaster models to create a codebook. Scientists and newspaper staff examined the codebook for congruency regarding interpretation and themes. With copyright permission to access online newspaper files, NVivo software was used to search for Hurricane Harvey-related terms (e.g., ‘Harvey, tropical storm, flood, damage, volunteer’). Stories from 3 days post-Harvey to 6 months post-Harvey were examined and again at anniversary date. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: The weekly South Jetty newspaper was published continuously from August 31, 2017, through the date our study ended, February 22, 2018. Analysis showed themes of the storm and community response to disaster at multiple levels. Harvey caused catastrophic flooding, destruction, on par with 2005 Hurricane Katrina as the costliest storm on record. In Port Aransas, 130 mph winds and a 12-foot storm surge damaged 90% of the buildings. Stories reflected Phases of Response: Pre-disaster, Impact, Heroic, Honeymoon, Disillusionment, and initial phases of Reconstruction and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. Story: ‘It’s not just the physical part of Port Aransas that was hurt by the hurricane. Harvey also wounded the town’s collective psyche. We’ve wept for our losses, then counted our blessings, then wept for our losses again.’ DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF FINDINGS: Newspapers were a rich source of post-disaster data. Text and pictures were poignant. Thematic analysis identified stages of recovery. Working alongside news staff as community partners is feasible for community engagement to co-create a post-hurricane health assessment and connect it to our academic health center’s disaster response capacity. Cambridge University Press 2021-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8827916/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.607 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Health Equity & Community Engagement
Stevens, Kathleen R.
Judson, Mary
Parker, Dan
Piernik-Yoder, Bridgett
Lee, Wendy
Reistetter, Timothy
Vasquez, David
16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title_full 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title_fullStr 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title_full_unstemmed 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title_short 16322 Post-Hurricane Community Health Assessment through Newspaper Stories and Interprofessional Community Engagement
title_sort 16322 post-hurricane community health assessment through newspaper stories and interprofessional community engagement
topic Health Equity & Community Engagement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827916/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2021.607
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