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Behavioral Study:
Emergency Evacuation Study

An evaluation of evacuation intentions and behaviors of individuals in emergency situations

Goals:

To evaluate the individual, organizational, and structural factors that act as facilitators or barriers to evacuation behavior; to evaluate environmental cues to action that impact the individual’s intention to evacuate; to assess the impact that personal attitudes, beliefs, and perception of risk/danger have on an individual’s evacuation intentions; and to assess the impact that group behaviors, attitudes, beliefs, and perceptions of risk/danger have on an individual’s intention to evacuate. 

Who would use the data?

Emergency managers, structural engineers, occupational health and safety specialists, building code developers, fire safety specialists, industry executives, organizational psychologists, the disaster research community, city planners, and policy makers who must prepare for the rapid evacuation of individuals from buildings. 

Research questions: 

Methods:

Data Sources: 

Sample Variables:

Type of building structure, floors that were evacuated, type, number of fire stair wells, use of elevators, response time of rescue personnel, length of time to evacuate, length of time to decide to evacuate, number of prior drills, type and extent of fire safety, life safety training, safety climate, individual variables (e.g., handicap status, health status, age, etc.), barriers to response time, etc.

Time frame:

Immediate up to two years following the event.

Potential Partner/Collaborators:

State and local health departments, state and local emergency response agencies, life safety code regulators, Schools of Public Health, Medicine, and Nursing, local building agencies and authorities, and CDC, NCIPC staff.

IRB Needed:

IRB certification will be needed. Steps should be taken to ensure the health and well being of evacuees since their participation may place them at potential risk for mental distress as they review the events.

Page last reviewed June 23, 2006
Page last modified June 2, 2003


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