Designing Equitable, Transparent Community-Engaged Disaster Research.

Publication Type:
Book Chapter
Year of Publication:
Author(s):
Rohlman D, Samon SM, Allan SE, Barton ML, Dixon HM, Ghetu CC, Tidwell LG, Hoffman PD, Oluyomi A, Symanski E, Bondy M, Anderson KA
Journal:
Citiz Sci
Date Published:
Abstract:

Disaster research faces significant infrastructure challenges: regional and federal coordination, access to resources, and community collaboration. Disasters can lead to chemical exposures that potentially impact human health and cause concern in affected communities. Community-engaged research, which incorporates local knowledge and voices, is well-suited for work with communities that experience impacts of environmental exposures following disasters. We present three examples of community-engaged disaster research (CEnDR) following oil spills, hurricanes, and wildfires, and their impact on long-term social, physical, and technical community infrastructure. We highlight the following CEnDR structures: researcher/community networks; convenient research tools; adaptable data collection modalities for equitable access; and return of data.

DOI:
10.5334/cstp.443
PubMed ID:
36909292
PubMed Central ID:
PMC9997484
Funding Sources
R21 ES029460,R21 ES020120,P30 ES030287,P30 ES030285,P42 ES016465,R21 ES029616,T32 ES007060,P30 ES000210