4.6 Article

Flood disaster preparedness: experience and attitude of rural residents in Sichuan, China

Journal

NATURAL HAZARDS
Volume 104, Issue 3, Pages 2591-2618

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11069-020-04286-0

Keywords

Flooding; Flood disaster; Disaster preparedness; Disaster trauma; Sichuan; Rural China; Ordered logit regression

Funding

  1. Sichuan Province Social Science Planning Project [SC19TJ030]
  2. Sichuan Science and Technology Department Soft Science Major Work Support Research Project [20RKX0412, 2020JDR0177]
  3. Sichuan Rural Community Governance Research Center fund [SQZL2019C01]
  4. Ministry of Education Industry-School Cooperative Education Program [201901098002]
  5. Funding for Key Teachers of Chengdu University of Technology [10912-KYGG2019-02305]
  6. Sichuan Provincial Department of Education [18ZA0048]
  7. Development Research Center of Oil and Gas, Sichuan [CYQK-SKB17-04]
  8. Research Center for Systems Science and Enterprise Development, Key Research of Social Sciences Base of Sichuan Province [Xq17B05]
  9. Electronic Commerce and Modern Logistics Research Center Program, Key Research Base of Humanities and Social Science, Sichuan Provincial Education Department [DSWL17-13]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Concerns regarding climate change have recently spotlighted the devastating impacts of flooding. In this regard, disaster preparedness is known to mitigate against potential loss suffered as a consequence of flood disasters. Extant research has explored the influence of residents' experience and attitude on disaster preparedness behavior as separate factors; however, research to date has yet to consider these inter-related factors simultaneously. Accordingly, this study explores this relationship, taking rural residents of the flood-prone regions of Sichuan Province, China, as the research subject. Exploratory factor analysis and ordered logistic regression are used to ascertain the effects of flood experience and attitude on residents' disaster preparedness behavior. Results show the following. (1) The level of disaster preparedness behavior of rural residents is relatively low. (2) Respondents who are older, more educated, or who have lived locally for longer are more likely to be better prepared for flood disasters. (3) On the other hand, respondents with higher income, either as individuals or households, are less prepared. (4) Previous flood experience and disposition toward disaster also impacts preparedness behavior. On the basis of these findings, the following suggestions are proposed as mitigation policies for flood-prone areas. (1) Structural flood control measures should be organically combined with daily disaster preparedness. (2) Rural areas affected by devastating floods should offer psychological counseling to residents in order to reduce states of fear and helplessness. (3) Government departments should inform residents in real time of flood warnings and of flood control measures. (4) Lastly, relevant local departments should educate local residents in flood preparedness. Taken together, these measures can be expected to improve living conditions, people's trust in the media, and in the government's flood control capacity.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available