Abstract

For effective communication and management of disaster risks, it is important to explore how media exposure and disaster experience related to earthquake events affect residents’ prospect ranks of disaster risk perceptions. Using survey data from 327 households located in the Wenchuan and Lushan earthquake regions in China, the ordinary least square method was used to explore the associations among media exposure, severity of disaster experience, and residents’ perception of prospect ranks of the possibility and severity of disasters. The results showed the following. (1) Rural households relied predominately on television broadcasts from traditional media, and on mobile phones and internet content from new media to obtain disaster information. From the residents surveyed, 90% believed that a disaster experience was serious, 82% considered that another major earthquake would seriously affect their lives and property, while approximately 40% of the residents did not believe there would be another major earthquake in the next 10 years. (2) Media exposure was negatively correlated with the perceived prospect ranks of the probability and severity of disasters, with traditional media exposure significantly negatively correlated with the perceived prospect ranks of the severity of disasters and new media exposure significantly negatively correlated with the perceived prospect ranks of the probability of disasters. Severity experience was significantly and positively correlated with the perceived prospect ranks of the probability and severity of disasters. (3) New media exposure moderated the relationship between residents’ disaster experience and their perception of prospect ranks of the severity of disasters. This study can help deepen our understanding of disaster risk communication and better guide the practice of disaster risk management.

Highlights

  • Faced with the threat of natural disasters, many empirical studies have shown that effective and adequate disaster preparedness plays an important role in preventing the loss of life and damage to property [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Inconsistent with the research results of Basolo et al [7], Zhu and Yao [34], Fleming et al [46] and Hong et al [10], which found that media exposure could significantly improve residents’ perceived prospect ranks of disaster risk perception, and with research hypothesis H1, the results from the present study showed that media exposure was significantly and negatively correlated with the perceived prospect ranks of the probability and severity of a disaster

  • Based on the survey data of 327 households in four counties located in the worst-hit areas of the Sichuan earthquake in China, the present study analyzed the characteristics and associations of residents’ media exposure, disaster experience, and perceived prospect ranks of disaster risk perception, and obtained the following conclusions

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Summary

Introduction

Faced with the threat of natural disasters, many empirical studies have shown that effective and adequate disaster preparedness plays an important role in preventing the loss of life and damage to property [1,2,3,4,5]. Public Health 2020, 17, 3246; doi:10.3390/ijerph17093246 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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