Awareness of the impact of disasters globally on mental health is increasing. Known difficulties in preparing communities for disasters and a lack of focus on relationship building and organizational capacity in preparedness and response have led to a greater policy focus on community resiliency as a key public health approach to disaster response. This perspective emphasizes relationships, trust and engagement as core competencies for disaster preparedness and response/recovery. In this paper, we describe how an approach to community engagement for improving mental health services, disaster recovery, and preparedness from a community resiliency perspective emerged from our work in applying a partnered, participatory research framework, iteratively, in Los Angeles County and the City of New Orleans. Our approach has a specific focus on behavioral health and relationship building across diverse sectors and stakeholders concerned with under-resourced communities. We use as examples both research studies and services demonstrations discuss the lessons learned and implications for providers, communities, and policymakers pertaining to both improving mental health outcomes and addressing disaster preparedness and response. (author abstract) #P4HEwebinarJune2024
Community engagement in disaster preparedness and recovery: A tale of two cities - Los Angeles and New Orleans
Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Wells, Kenneth B.
Springgate, Benjamin F.
Lizaola, Elizabeth
Jones, Felica
Plough, Alonzo
Publisher
PubMed Central
Date
July 2013
Publication
The Psychiatric Clinics of North America
Abstract / Description
Copyright
Yes
Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Journal Article
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Mental/Behavioral Health
Social/Structural Determinants » Global Health » Disasters