Building Community Resilience to Disasters: A Way Forward to Enhance National Health Security
- PMID: 28083162
- PMCID: PMC4945213
Building Community Resilience to Disasters: A Way Forward to Enhance National Health Security
Abstract
Community resilience, or the sustained ability of a community to withstand and recover from adversity, has become a key policy issue at federal, state, and local levels, including in the National Health Security Strategy. Because resources are limited in the wake of an emergency, it is increasingly recognized that resilience is critical to a community's ability to reduce long recovery periods after an emergency. This article shares details of a report that provides a roadmap for federal, state, and local leaders who are developing plans to enhance community resilience for health security threats and describes options for building community resilience in key areas. Based on findings from a literature review and a series of community and regional focus groups, the authors provide a definition of community resilience in the context of national health security and a set of eight levers and five core components for building resilience. They then describe suggested activities that communities are pursuing and may want to strengthen for community resilience, and they identify challenges to implementation.
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References
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- Chandra A, Acosta J, Meredith LS, Sanches K, Stern S, Uscher-Pines L, Williams M, and Yeung D, Understanding Community Resilience in the Context of National Health Security: A Literature Review, Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND Corporation, WR-737, 2010. As of January 20, 2011: http://www.rand.org/pubs/working_papers/WR737.html
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- DHS—See U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
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- HHS—See U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. - PubMed
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- Norris FH, Stevens SP, Pfefferbaum B, Wyche KF, and Pfefferbaum RL, “Community Resilience as a Metaphor, Theory, Set of Capacities, and Strategy for Disaster Readiness,” American Journal of Community Psychology, Vol. 41, No. 1–2, 2008, pp. 127–150. - PubMed
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