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Recent natural and human-caused disasters have awakened public health officials to the importance of emergency preparedness. Guided by health behavior and media effects theories, the analysis of a statewide survey in Georgia reveals that self-efficacy, subjective norm, and emergency news exposure are positively associated with the respondents' possession of emergency items and their stages of emergency preparedness. Practical implications suggest less focus on demographics as the sole predictor of emergency preparedness and more comprehensive measures of preparedness, including both a person's cognitive stage of preparedness and checklists of emergency items on hand. We highlight the utility of theory-based approaches for understanding and predicting public emergency preparedness as a way to enable more effective health and risk communication.
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Hye‐Jin Paek
Grady Memorial Hospital
Karen Hilyard
Family Health International 360
Vicki S. Freimuth
University of Georgia
Journal of Health Communication
Michigan State University
Texas A&M University
University of Georgia
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Paek et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20b89d9e00afa23b234b1c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10810731003753083