Errett Nicole A, Barnett Daniel J, Thompson Carol B, Tosatto Rob, Austin Brad, Schaffzin Samuel, Ansari Armin, Semon Natalie L, Balicer Ran D, Links Jonathan M
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N. Broadway, Room 513, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Biosecur Bioterror. 2013 Mar;11(1):29-40. doi: 10.1089/bsp.2012.0047. Epub 2013 Mar 11.
The goal of this study was to investigate the willingness of Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) volunteers to participate in public health emergency-related activities by assessing their attitudes and beliefs. MRC volunteers responded to an online survey organized around the Extended Parallel Process Model (EPPM). Respondents reported agreement with attitude/belief statements representing perceived threat, perceived efficacy, and personal/organizational preparedness in 4 scenarios: a weather-related disaster, a pandemic influenza emergency, a radiological ("dirty bomb") emergency, and an inhalational anthrax bioterrorism emergency. Logistic regression analyses were used to evaluate predictors of volunteer response willingness. In 2 response contexts (if asked and regardless of severity), self-reported willingness to respond was higher among those with a high perceived self-efficacy than among those with low perceived self-efficacy. Analyses of the association between attitude/belief statements and the EPPM profiles indicated that, under all 4 scenarios and with few exceptions, those with a perceived high threat/high efficacy EPPM profile had statistically higher odds of agreement with the attitude/belief statements than those with a perceived low threat/low efficacy EPPM profile. The radiological emergency consistently received the lowest agreement rates for the attitude/belief statements and response willingness across scenarios. The findings suggest that enrollment with an MRC unit is not automatically predictive of willingness to respond in these types of scenarios. While MRC volunteers' self-reported willingness to respond was found to differ across scenarios and among different attitude and belief statements, the identification of self-efficacy as the primary predictor of willingness to respond regardless of severity and if asked highlights the critical role of efficacy in an organized volunteer response context.
本研究的目的是通过评估医学后备队(MRC)志愿者的态度和信念,来调查他们参与公共卫生应急相关活动的意愿。MRC志愿者对围绕扩展平行过程模型(EPPM)组织的在线调查做出了回应。受访者报告了在四种情况下对代表感知威胁、感知效能以及个人/组织准备情况的态度/信念陈述的认同:与天气相关的灾难、大流行性流感应急、放射性(“脏弹”)应急以及吸入性炭疽生物恐怖主义应急。使用逻辑回归分析来评估志愿者响应意愿的预测因素。在两种响应情境下(如果被询问以及无论严重程度如何),自我报告的响应意愿在自我效能感高的人群中高于自我效能感低的人群。对态度/信念陈述与EPPM概况之间关联的分析表明,在所有四种情况下且几乎无例外,具有高威胁/高效能EPPM概况的人群与态度/信念陈述的认同在统计学上的几率高于具有低威胁/低效能EPPM概况的人群。在所有情境中,放射性应急在态度/信念陈述和响应意愿方面始终获得最低的认同率。研究结果表明,加入MRC单位并不能自动预测在这类情况下的响应意愿。虽然发现MRC志愿者自我报告的响应意愿在不同情境以及不同态度和信念陈述之间存在差异,但将自我效能确定为无论严重程度如何以及是否被询问时响应意愿的主要预测因素,凸显了效能在有组织的志愿者响应情境中的关键作用。