31
Percent of People On High Risk Coast Will Refuse Evacuation Order, Survey Of Hurricane
Preparedness Finds, US
January 21st,
2009
According to a new survey of
people in high-risk hurricane areas conducted by the Harvard School of Public
Health Project on the Public and Biological Security, one-third (31%) of
residents said if government officials said they had to evacuate due to a major
hurricane this season, they would not leave. This is an increase from 2006 when
23% said they would not evacuate.
The survey was conducted in
eight states Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina and Texas and only included residents of counties
within 20 miles of the coast. The poll included a special sample of the New Orleans metropolitan
area.
The top reasons people give
for not evacuating involve issues of safety and
security. Three-quarters (75%) say their home is well-built and they would be
safe there. Over half (56%) feel that roads would be too crowded, and slightly
more than one in three (36%) feels that evacuating would be dangerous.
One-third (33%) worry that their possessions would be stolen or damaged while
one in four (27%) say they would not evacuate because
they do not want to leave their pets.
Public officials need to be
concerned that the further we get from the severe hurricanes of 2005, the less
willing people are to evacuate, said Robert J. Blendon,
Professor of Health Policy and Political Analysis at the Harvard School of
Public Health. Officials need to remind people that many homes are vulnerable
to major storms. They also need to ensure safe evacuation routes are available
and the public is aware of them.
These findings are based on
interviews conducted June 18 - July 10, 2007 with 5,046 adults in high
hurricane risk counties in eight states.
The complete survey and
charts with figures are available here.
State data is available here.
The results of this survey
will be distributed to state and local officials for use in emergency planning.
Evacuation and Shelter
Conditions
If residents of high-risk
hurricane areas have to evacuate because of a major hurricane, most would be
concerned about the conditions of evacuation shelters if they had to go to one.
The biggest worries people have are that shelters would be unsanitary (68%),
there wouldnt be enough clean water to drink (66%), the shelter would be too
crowded (65%), they would be exposed to sick people (62%), and medical care
would be lacking (58%).
Hurricane Preparations
Many residents of
hurricane-prone areas have not made critical preparations for a major storm. If
running water were cut off due to a hurricane, one in four (23%) would run out
of clean water after two days, and over half (54%) would run out after six
days. If power were shut off, one in ten (9%) would be without food after two
days, and nearly half (44%) after six days.
Hurricane Katrina showed that
families can get separated and communication can break down in the aftermath of
a major storm, but most residents have not prepared for that possibility. Two
in three (66%) have not agreed on a meeting place if their family is separated,
and one in two (49%) have not agreed on a phone number outside the region that
family members could call. Of those who intend to evacuate and need help to do
so (13%), half (50%) do not have that help lined up.
Key Preparedness
Information
Past experience with
hurricanes has identified some critical information that people should know in
order to be prepared for a storm. Many residents of high-risk areas were
unaware of some key information. One out of three (34%) do not know if their
home is located in an evacuation zone. Thirty-nine percent do not know the
location of an evacuation center in their community where they could go if they
had to.
A large majority of people
would be at risk of eating food that has spoiled due to a loss of refrigeration
in a power outage. The USDA recommends that perishable food should not be eaten
if refrigeration has been turned off for four hours. Only one in five (20%)
knew that perishable food would be safe for just a few hours. One in three
(36%) said that food is safe for up to one day, one in four (25%) said two
days, and 16% said three or more days. In addition, one in five did not know
that each household member requires at least one gallon of clean water per day,
the amount recommended by the CDC.
Problems During Past Hurricanes
Nearly one-half (46%) of the
respondents in the survey live in communities that were damaged by a hurricane during
the past three years. The survey asked them about the problems they had during
these hurricanes in order to identify issues that could be prevented in future
hurricanes. The most common problem was getting gas to evacuate (35%). Twenty
percent reported they did not have enough money at some point, 14% did not have
enough water and 12% did not have enough food. Of note, smaller numbers
reported needing medical care but not getting it (5%), getting injured (5%) or
being threatened by violence (3%) (Figure 5). One area
where few people reported problems was getting the information they needed to
keep themselves and their families safe (8%).
New
Orleans
The survey included a sample
of the New Orleans
metropolitan area to see if residents there differed from other high-risk area
residents. After their experiences during Hurricane Katrina, most New Orleans residents say
they would evacuate for a future storm. Only 14% would not evacuate compared to
32% of residents of other high-risk areas. Six in ten (61%) do not know the
location of an evacuation shelter if they needed to go to one, which is
significantly more than residents of other areas (38%). Despite the dramatic
images of people stranded during Katrina, over half (54%) of New Orleans residents are confident they
would be rescued if they needed to be during a future storm.
It is worrisome that New Orleans, the site of one of the most severe hurricanes
in U.S.
history, has such a large proportion of people who dont know the location of
an evacuation center, said Professor Blendon. An
important priority for government and voluntary agencies should be to inform
people of the location of shelters well before a storm hits.
Even after Katrina, a
substantial percentage of New Orleans
residents are not prepared for a major storm. One-half of New Orleans residents (51%) have not agreed
on a place for family to meet if they get separated. Thirty-nine percent have
not agreed on a phone number outside the region that family members could call.
A sizable percentage of New Orleans
residents (23%) do not have more than two days of water if the water supply
were cut off.
When asked to rate the
response of government and voluntary agencies to the problems created by the
last major hurricane, 78% percent of New
Orleans residents said it was fair or poor compared to
39% of residents of other areas damaged by a hurricane. Only 19% of New Orleans residents
said the response was excellent or good compared to 57% in other areas.
Problems Facing Minorities
and Low-Income Residents of High-Risk Hurricane Areas
Hurricane Katrina illustrated
the additional challenges facing minorities and the poor in these high-risk
coastal areas during a major hurricane. This survey finds that although
African-Americans (73%) and Latino-Americans (71%) are more likely than whites
(59%) to say they would evacuate if government officials said they had to leave
in the event of a major hurricane, they are also more likely to need help to do
so. Seventeen percent of African-Americans and 10% of Latino-Americans say they
need help to evacuate and do not have that help lined up compared to 3% of
whites. Low-income residents also would have more problems evacuating than
those who are better off financially. Eighteen percent of those making less
than $25,000 a year and who intend to evacuate do not have the necessary help
compared to 4% of those making $25,000 a year or more.
If minorities and low-income
residents are unable to evacuate because they do not have help, they are less
prepared to stay in their homes and weather the storm and its aftermath.
Approximately one-third of African-Americans (32%), Latino-Americans (35%) and
low-income residents (33%) say they are not prepared if a major hurricane were
to strike their community in the next six months. This compares to 14% of
whites and 19% of those making $25,000 a year or more. A greater percentage of
African-Americans (18%), Latino-Americans (11%) and low-income residents (14%)
do not have enough food on hand to last more than three days compared to whites
(6%) and those making $25,000 a year or more (8%).
Methodology
This is the 25th in a series
of studies by the Harvard School of Public Health Project on the Public and
Biological Security. The study was designed and analyzed by researchers at the
Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). The project director is Robert J. Blendon of the Harvard School of Public Health. The
research team also includes Tami Buhr, John M.
Benson, and Kathleen J. Weldon of the Harvard School of Public Health, and
Melissa J. Herrmann of ICR/International Communications Research. Fieldwork was
conducted via telephone for the Project by ICR/International Communications
Research of Media (PA) between June 18 and July 10, 2007.
The survey was conducted with
a representative sample of 5,046 non-institutionalized adults ages 18 and over
in high hurricane risk counties in eight states. Survey participants included
residents of all counties within 20 miles of the coast in Alabama
(503 interviews), Florida (1,006), Georgia (506), Louisiana
(1,004), Mississippi (513), North
Carolina (504), South Carolina
(507), and Texas
(503). The survey included 502 residents of the New Orleans metropolitan area, where
interviews were conducted with adults from cellphone-only
households, as well from households with landline telephones.
The results were weighted to
represent the total adult population in the high hurricane risk counties of the
region as a whole. The margin of error for the total sample is plus or minus
2.6 percentage points; for the New Orleans-area sample, plus or minus 4.7
percentage points.
Possible sources of nonsampling error include nonresponse
bias, as well as question wording and ordering effects. Nonresponse
in telephone surveys produces some known biases in survey-derived estimates
because participation tends to vary for different subgroups of the population.
To compensate for these known biases, sample data are weighted to the most
recent Census data available from the Current Population Survey for gender,
age, race, education, as well as number of adults in the household. Other
techniques, including random-digit dialing, replicate subsamples, callbacks
staggered over times of day and days of the week, and systematic respondent
selection within households, are used to ensure that the sample is
representative.
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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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The Harvard School of Public
Health Project on the Public and Biological Security is funded by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention through a grant to the Association of State
and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO). HSPH provides ASTHO and the CDC with
technical assistance for public health communication by monitoring the response
of the general public to public health threats.
Source: Robin Herman
Harvard School
of Public Health