Abstract

Climate change-related extreme events are increasing in frequency and severity. Understanding household emergency preparedness capacity in Health-Emergency and Disaster Risk Management (Health-EDRM) for at risk urban communities is limited. The main objective of the study is to explore the association among risk perception, household preparedness, and the self-reported short-term impacts of Typhoons for urban residents. A population-based, cross-sectional telephone survey using random digit-dialling was conducted among Hong Kong adults within 2 weeks following 2018 Typhoon Mangkhut, the most intense typhoon that affected Hong Kong, a subtropical city, in thirty years. Among the 521 respondents, 93.9% and 74.3% reported some form of emergency preparedness and typhoon-specific preparedness measure (TSPM) against Mangkhut, respectively. Respondents who perceived a higher risk at home during typhoons and had practiced routine emergency preparedness measures (during nonemergency periods) were more likely to undertake TSPM. Of the respondents, 33.4% reported some form of impact (11.1% were household-specific) by Typhoon Mangkhut. Practicing TSPM was not associated with the reduction of short-term household impacts. Current preparedness measures may be insufficient to address the impact of super typhoons. Strategies for health-EDRM for urban residents will be needed to cope with increasing climate change-related extreme events.

Highlights

  • Typhoons, known as cyclones or hurricanes depending on its location and strength, are the most common natural hazard in the Asia Pacific and Southeast Asia region [1]

  • The current study aims to explore the preparedness measures applied, the response activities conducted, and the impact experienced by urban residents when Typhoon Mangkhut landed in Hong

  • Consistent with previous studies [18], this study found that a higher educational level, a higher risk perception, more routine emergency preparedness, and previous experience of impact were positively associated with people who engage in disaster preparedness

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Summary

Introduction

Known as cyclones or hurricanes depending on its location and strength, are the most common natural hazard in the Asia Pacific and Southeast Asia region [1]. Highlighted the global hurricane/typhoon-related mortality trends have decreased in the past seventy years, severe typhoons have increased in frequency in the last decade. Hong Kong, a densely populated subtropical metropolis in Southern China, has on average 5–6 annual typhoons [2]. 1980–2010, only two T10 typhoons, the highest Tropical Cyclone Warning Signal, occurred, yet three happened in one decade (2012, 2017, and 2018) [2]. Since 2018, the last typhoon-related death was. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 596; doi:10.3390/ijerph16040596 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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