Mordy Meghan, Adams Rachel M, Peek Lori, Tobin Jennifer, Thomas Tracy N, Soler Robin
Author Affiliations: Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado (Drs Mordy, Adams, and Tobin); Department of Sociology and Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado (Dr Peek); Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia (Ms Thomas and Dr Soler).
J Public Health Manag Pract. 2025;31(4):600-609. doi: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000002156. Epub 2025 Apr 9.
Many people living in the 5 inhabited US territories experience high rates of natural hazard exposure and social vulnerability to disaster impacts. Public health workforce development and evidence-based, culturally competent approaches to disaster preparedness, response, and recovery are needed in these regions.
In 2020, the Natural Hazards Center established the Public Health Disaster Research Award Program with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The program's goal is to advance public health disaster research and practice by funding, training, mentoring, and connecting researchers, students, and practitioners in historically underserved areas with high natural hazard risk. Between 2020 and 2022, 26 research teams received up to $50 000 each to investigate public health disasters in 1 or more US territories. The program also supported awardees by providing individual consultations, online trainings, feedback on report drafts, and a virtual group workshop on the public health implications of research. Awardees authored final reports and presented at a public webinar.
In 2023, the Natural Hazards Center developed and distributed an online survey to all principal investigators. The survey evaluated how awardees advanced knowledge about public health disasters in the US territories; what skills, resources, and connections they acquired; and how they translated their research into public health applications and otherwise disseminated their findings.
Our evaluation showed that the program is advancing knowledge of understudied hazard contexts and socially vulnerable populations in the US territories and supports awardees in sharing their findings with academics, policymakers, and practitioners. Moreover, it expanded the public health disaster workforce by bringing professionals from a diverse range of disciplines and institutions into the field, and by investing in students, early career scholars, and investigators based in US territories. Researchers are working with local partners to apply their findings to practice.
许多居住在美国5个有人居住领土上的人面临着自然灾害暴露的高风险以及对灾害影响的社会脆弱性。这些地区需要公共卫生人力发展以及基于证据、具有文化胜任力的备灾、应对和恢复方法。
2020年,自然灾害中心在疾病控制与预防中心的资助下设立了公共卫生灾害研究奖励计划。该计划的目标是通过资助、培训、指导以及将历史上服务不足且自然灾害风险高的地区的研究人员、学生和从业人员联系起来,推动公共卫生灾害研究与实践。在2020年至2022年期间,26个研究团队每个团队获得了高达5万美元的资金,用于调查美国1个或多个领土上的公共卫生灾害。该计划还通过提供个人咨询、在线培训、报告草稿反馈以及关于研究对公共卫生影响的虚拟小组研讨会来支持获奖者。获奖者撰写了最终报告并在公开网络研讨会上进行了展示。
2023年,自然灾害中心开发并向所有首席研究员分发了一份在线调查问卷。该调查评估了获奖者如何增进对美国领土上公共卫生灾害的了解;他们获得了哪些技能、资源和联系;以及他们如何将研究转化为公共卫生应用并以其他方式传播研究结果。
我们的评估表明,该计划正在增进对美国领土上研究不足的灾害背景和社会脆弱人群的了解,并支持获奖者与学者、政策制定者和从业人员分享他们的研究结果。此外,它通过将来自不同学科和机构的专业人员引入该领域,并投资于美国领土上的学生、早期职业学者和研究人员,扩大了公共卫生灾害工作队伍。研究人员正在与当地合作伙伴合作,将他们的研究结果应用于实践。