Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jul 2024)

Engaging Communities in Emerging Infectious Disease Mitigation to Improve Public Health and Safety

  • Michàlle E. Mor Barak,
  • Shinyi Wu,
  • Gil Luria,
  • Leslie P. Schnyder,
  • Ruotong Liu,
  • Anthony Nguyen,
  • Charles D. Kaplan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3007.230932
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 7
pp. 1390 – 1397

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the need for potent community-based tools to improve preparedness. We developed a community health-safety climate (HSC) measure to assess readiness to adopt health behaviors during a pandemic. We conducted a mixed-methods study incorporating qualitative methods (e.g., focus groups) to generate items for the measure and quantitative data from a February 2021 national survey to test reliability, multilevel construct, and predictive and nomologic validities. The 20-item HSC measure is unidimensional (Cronbach α = 0.87). All communities had strong health-safety climates but with significant differences between communities (F = 10.65; p<0.001), and HSC levels predicted readiness to adopt health-safety behaviors. HSC strength moderated relationships between HSC level and behavioral indicators; higher climate homogeneity demonstrated stronger correlations. The HSC measure can predict community readiness to adopt health-safety behaviors in communities to inform interventions before diseases spread, providing a valuable tool for public health authorities and policymakers during a pandemic.

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