Wu Yi-Ling, Lin Tsai-Wen, Lam Jason, Wang Samuel S C, Lo Herman H M
Master's Program of Transition and Leisure Education for Individuals with Disabilities, University of Taipei, Taipei, Taiwan.
National Academy for Education Research, Taipei, Taiwan.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jan 17;25(1):200. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-21361-y.
This study investigates the relationships between resilience dimensions, coping strategies, and prior disaster experience, focusing on disaster preparedness and avoidance behaviors in Taiwan.
A total of 550 participants were surveyed, with 57.82% being female and the majority aged between 21 and 40 years. Using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and path analysis, we examined six resilience dimensions, which include problem-solving, social support, negative emotion regulation, stable interpersonal relationships, assertiveness, and self-regulation, as predictors of disaster preparedness and avoidance behaviors.
The models accounted for 41.83-44.83% of the variance in preparedness and 5.43-10.74% of the variance in denial/avoidance. Across all models, problem-solving, assertiveness, and living with family consistently predicted higher preparedness, while income consistently predicted lower denial and avoidance behaviors. Notably, flood experience significantly moderated the relationship between social support and denial/avoidance (β = 0.21, p = .017), indicating that participants with stronger social support who had experienced floods were more likely to engage in denial and avoidance behaviors. Additionally, flood experience negatively moderated the relationship between negative emotion regulation and both preparedness (β = - 0.18, p = .035) and denial/avoidance (β = - 0.23, p = .030), suggesting that individuals with higher emotional regulation were less likely to prepare or deny disaster risks after flood exposure.
These findings highlight the importance of addressing individual resilience capacities and the complexities of prior disaster experiences in disaster preparedness interventions, with particular attention to vulnerable populations.
本研究调查了复原力维度、应对策略与既往灾害经历之间的关系,重点关注台湾地区的灾害准备和规避行为。
共对550名参与者进行了调查,其中57.82%为女性,大多数年龄在21至40岁之间。我们使用验证性因子分析(CFA)和路径分析,检验了六个复原力维度,包括解决问题、社会支持、负面情绪调节、稳定的人际关系、自信和自我调节,作为灾害准备和规避行为的预测因素。
这些模型解释了准备行为中41.83%-44.83%的方差以及否认/规避行为中5.43%-10.74%的方差。在所有模型中,解决问题、自信和与家人同住始终能预测更高的准备程度,而收入始终能预测更低的否认和规避行为。值得注意的是,洪水经历显著调节了社会支持与否认/规避之间的关系(β = 0.21,p = 0.017),表明经历过洪水且社会支持较强的参与者更有可能采取否认和规避行为。此外,洪水经历对负面情绪调节与准备行为(β = -0.18,p = 0.035)以及否认/规避行为(β = -0.23,p = 0.030)之间的关系均有负向调节作用,这表明情绪调节能力较高的个体在经历洪水后准备应对或否认灾害风险的可能性较小。
这些发现凸显了在灾害准备干预措施中关注个体复原力能力以及既往灾害经历复杂性的重要性,尤其要关注弱势群体。