This study explores household-level evacuation decision-making in response to Hurricane Laura, in a context where hurricane risk reduction measures contradicted COVID-19 risk reduction measures. Data were collected using a mail-based survey approach from households along the coast of Texas and Louisiana to explore drivers of and barriers to evacuation, including COVID-19 measures such as negative affect, risk perceptions, protective actions, and exposure. Testing for direct and indirect effects among the drivers of and barriers to evacuation, we find that many of our COVID-19 measures did not have a direct effect on evacuation but did have indirect effects through other factors. We also found evidence of both direct and indirect relationships with regards to more conventional drivers of evacuation found in the literature. We close with a discussion of the limitations and implications of this study.
Household hurricane evacuation during a dual-threat event: Hurricane Laura and COVID-19
A. Greer,David Huntsman,Hao-Che Wu,H. Murphy,L. Clay
Published 2023 in Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment
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PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2023
- Venue
Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment
- Publication date
2023-06-01
- Fields of study
Sociology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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