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Designing Equitable, Transparent Community-Engaged Disaster Research.

Diana RohlmanSamantha M SamonSarah AllanMichael BartonHolly M DixonChristine C GhetuLane TidwellPeter HoffmanAbiodun O OluyomiElaine SymanskiMelissa BondyKim A Anderson
Published in: Citizen science : theory and practice (2022)
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.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • air pollution
  • electronic health record
  • physical activity
  • data analysis