Cognitive Interview Validation of a Novel Household Hazard Vulnerability Assessment Instrument.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Western Journal of Nursing Research Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-26 DOI:10.1177/01939459231217935
Taryn Amberson, Olive Ndayishimiye, Quanah Yellow Cloud, Jessica Castner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Weather and climate disasters are responsible for over 13 000 US deaths, worsened morbidity, and $1.7 trillion in additional costs over the last 40 years with profound racial disparities.

Objectives: This project empirically generated items for a novel survey instrument of household hazard vulnerability with initial construct validation while addressing racial bias in the data collection process.

Methods: Cognitive interviews facilitated understanding regarding the performance of drafted survey questions with transdisciplinary expert panelists from diverse US regions on unique hazard/disaster/event items. To prevent representation bias in data collection, those with Black and/or African American racial, biracial, or multiracial identities were over-sampled. Interview video recordings were qualitatively analyzed using thematic and pattern coding.

Results: A cognitive process mapped to themes of disaster characteristics, resources, individual life facets, and felt effects was revealed. We identified 379 unique instances of linked terms as synonyms, co-occurring, compounding, or cascading events. Potential for racial bias in data collection was elucidated. Analysis of radiation exposure, trauma, and criminal acts of intent items revealed participants may not interpret survey items with these terms as intended.

Conclusion: Potential for racial bias exists relative to water dam failure, evacuation, external flood, suspicious packages/substances, and transportation failure. Hazard terms that were not interpreted as intended require further revision in the validation process of individual or household disaster vulnerability assessments. Several commonalities in the cognitive process and mapping of disaster terms may be utilized in disaster and climate change research aimed at the individual and household unit of analysis.

新型家庭灾害脆弱性评估工具的认知访谈验证。
背景:在过去 40 年中,天气和气候灾害造成美国 13 000 多人死亡、发病率上升和 1.7 万亿美元的额外成本,并造成严重的种族差异:本项目根据经验为一种新的家庭灾害脆弱性调查工具生成了项目,并进行了初步的结构验证,同时解决了数据收集过程中的种族偏见问题:方法:与来自美国不同地区的跨学科专家小组成员就独特的灾害/灾难/事件项目进行认知访谈,以促进对起草的调查问题性能的了解。为防止数据收集中的代表性偏差,对具有黑人和/或非裔美国人种族、双种族或多种族身份的人进行了过度抽样。采用主题编码和模式编码对访谈录像进行了定性分析:结果:我们发现了一个映射到灾难特征、资源、个人生活层面和感受到的影响等主题的认知过程。我们识别出了 379 个作为同义词、共生词、复合词或连带事件的关联词。阐明了数据收集中可能存在的种族偏见。对辐照、创伤和故意犯罪行为项目的分析表明,参与者可能无法按照预期解释包含这些术语的调查项目:结论:在水坝溃决、疏散、外部洪水、可疑包裹/物质和运输故障方面存在种族偏见的可能性。在个人或家庭灾害脆弱性评估的验证过程中,需要对未按原意解释的危害术语进行进一步修订。在以个人和家庭为分析单位的灾害和气候变化研究中,可以利用认知过程和灾害术语映射中的一些共性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Western Journal of Nursing Research (WJNR) is a widely read and respected peer-reviewed journal published twelve times a year providing an innovative forum for nurse researchers, students, and clinical practitioners to participate in ongoing scholarly dialogue. WJNR publishes research reports, systematic reviews, methodology papers, and invited special papers. This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
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