Abstract

Extreme weather events including flooding can have severe personal, infrastructural, and economic consequences, with recent evidence pointing to surface flooding as a pathway for the microbial contamination of private groundwater supplies. There is a pressing need for increasingly focused information and awareness campaigns to highlight the risks posed by extreme weather events and appropriate subsequent post-event actions. To date, little is known about the presence, directionality or magnitude of gender-related differences regarding flood risk awareness and behaviour among private groundwater users, a particularly susceptible sub-population due to an overarching paucity of infrastructural regulation across many regions. The current study investigated gender-related differences in flood risk perception and associated mitigation behaviours via a cross-sectional, national survey of 405 (168 female, 237 male) private groundwater supply users. The developed survey instrument assessed socio-demographic profile, previous flood experience, experiential and conjectural health behaviours (contingent on previous experience), and Risk, Attitude, Norms, Ability, Self-regulation (RANAS) framework questions. Statistically significant gender differences were found between both ‘Norm—Descriptive’ and ‘Ability—Self-efficacy’ RANAS elements (p < 0.05). Female respondents reported a lower level of awareness of the need for post-flood action(s) (8.9% vs. 16.5%), alongside a perceived “lack of information” as a reason for not testing their domestic well (4.9% vs. 11.5%). Conversely, male respondents were more likely to report awareness of their well location in relation to possible contamination sources (96.6% vs. 89.9%) and awareness of previous water testing results (98.9% vs. 93.0%). Gender-related gaps exist within the studied private groundwater reliant cohort, a sub-population which has to date remained under-studied within the context of climate change and extreme weather events. Accordingly, findings suggest that gender-focused communication and education may represent an effective tool for protecting current and future generations of global groundwater users.

Highlights

  • A recent global review reports that surface flooding may result in the contamination of groundwater systems via direct source ingress and/or preferential/bypass flows, thereby leading to waterborne enteric infections among private groundwater supply users [1]

  • Recent projections indicate significant global increases in the frequency and intensity of flooding events due to climate change [2,3,4], with the Republic of Ireland (RoI) forecast as one of the most severely affected countries in Europe relative to the mean population proportion residing in flood-prone areas [5]

  • This study investigated the presence of gender differences as they relate to flood risk perception and post-flood mitigation behaviours among 405 private groundwater supply users in the Republic of Ireland

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A recent global review reports that surface flooding may result in the contamination of groundwater systems via direct source ingress and/or preferential/bypass flows, thereby leading to waterborne enteric infections among private groundwater supply users [1]. Recent projections indicate significant global increases in the frequency and intensity of flooding events due to climate change [2,3,4], with the Republic of Ireland (RoI) forecast as one of the most severely affected countries in Europe relative to the mean population proportion residing in flood-prone areas [5]. Private groundwater systems account for a significant proportion of daily water for human consumption in many regions. It is critical that private groundwater users are aware of the risks posed by flooding to their domestic supplies and the necessary actions to take following localised flooding, as municipal/governmental support and expertise are frequently unavailable. Given the public health impacts of climate change exacerbation, evidence-based, appropriately framed strategies promoting an increased awareness of potential contamination mechanisms are necessary to motivate precautionary behavior [1]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call