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Risk Perception and Disaster Preparedness in Immigrants and Canadian-Born Adults: Analysis of a National Survey on Similarities and Differences.

Research has documented that immigrants tend to experience more negative consequences from natural disasters compared to native-born individuals, although research on how immigrants perceive and respond to natural disaster risks is sparse. We investigated how risk perception and disaster preparedness for natural disasters in immigrants compared to Canadian-born individuals as justifications for culturally-adapted risk communication and management. To this end, we analyzed the ratings on natural disaster risk perception beliefs and preparedness behaviors from a nationally representative survey (N = 1,089). Factor analyses revealed three underlying psychological dimensions of risk perception: external responsibility for disaster management, self-preparedness responsibility, and illusiveness of preparedness. Although immigrants and Canadian-born individuals shared the three-factor structure, there were differences in the salience of five risk perception beliefs. Despite these differences, immigrants and Canadian-born individuals were similar in the level of risk perception dimensions and disaster preparedness. Regression analyses revealed self-preparedness responsibility and external responsibility for disaster management positively predicted disaster preparedness whereas illusiveness of preparedness negatively predicted disaster preparedness in both groups. Our results showed that immigrants’ risk perception and disaster preparedness were comparable to their Canadian-born counterparts. That is, immigrant status did not necessarily yield differences in risk perception and disaster preparedness. These social groups may benefit from a risk communication and management strategy that addresses these risk perception dimensions to increase disaster preparedness. Given the diversity of the immigrant population, the model remains to be tested by further population segmentation.

Authors

  • Yong, An Gie, Yong AG, School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

  • Lemyre, Louise, Lemyre L, School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

  • Pinsent, Celine, Pinsent C, Groupe d'Analyse Psychosociale de la Santé, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

  • Krewski, Daniel, Krewski D, McLaughlin Centre for Population Health Risk Assessment, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

YEAR OF PUBLICATION: 2017
SOURCE: Risk Anal. 2017 Dec;37(12):2321-2333. doi: 10.1111/risa.12797. Epub 2017 Mar 17.
JOURNAL TITLE ABBREVIATION: Risk Anal
JOURNAL TITLE: Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis
ISSN: 1539-6924 (Electronic) 0272-4332 (Linking)
VOLUME: 37
ISSUE: 12
PAGES: 2321-2333
PLACE OF PUBLICATION: United States
ABSTRACT:
Research has documented that immigrants tend to experience more negative consequences from natural disasters compared to native-born individuals, although research on how immigrants perceive and respond to natural disaster risks is sparse. We investigated how risk perception and disaster preparedness for natural disasters in immigrants compared to Canadian-born individuals as justifications for culturally-adapted risk communication and management. To this end, we analyzed the ratings on natural disaster risk perception beliefs and preparedness behaviors from a nationally representative survey (N = 1,089). Factor analyses revealed three underlying psychological dimensions of risk perception: external responsibility for disaster management, self-preparedness responsibility, and illusiveness of preparedness. Although immigrants and Canadian-born individuals shared the three-factor structure, there were differences in the salience of five risk perception beliefs. Despite these differences, immigrants and Canadian-born individuals were similar in the level of risk perception dimensions and disaster preparedness. Regression analyses revealed self-preparedness responsibility and external responsibility for disaster management positively predicted disaster preparedness whereas illusiveness of preparedness negatively predicted disaster preparedness in both groups. Our results showed that immigrants' risk perception and disaster preparedness were comparable to their Canadian-born counterparts. That is, immigrant status did not necessarily yield differences in risk perception and disaster preparedness. These social groups may benefit from a risk communication and management strategy that addresses these risk perception dimensions to increase disaster preparedness. Given the diversity of the immigrant population, the model remains to be tested by further population segmentation.
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION: (c) 2017 Society for Risk Analysis.
LANGUAGE: eng
DATE OF PUBLICATION: 2017 Dec
DATE OF ELECTRONIC PUBLICATION: 20170317
DATE COMPLETED: 20180810
DATE REVISED: 20180810
MESH DATE: 2017/03/18 06:01
EDAT: 2017/03/18 06:00
STATUS: PubMed-not-MEDLINE
PUBLICATION STATUS: ppublish
LOCATION IDENTIFIER: 10.1111/risa.12797 [doi]
OWNER: NLM

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Daniel Krewski

Chief Risk Scientist

Dr. Daniel Krewski is Chief Risk Scientist and co-founder of Risk Sciences International (RSI), a firm established in 2006 to bring evidence-based, multidisciplinary expertise to the challenge of understanding, managing, and communicating risk. As RSI’s inaugural CEO and long-time scientific...
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