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Warning fatigue : Insights from the Australian Bushfire Context

机译:警告疲劳:澳大利亚丛林大火背景下的见解

摘要

Warning Fatigue or Cry-Wolf effect is a taken-for-granted phenomenon that can result from being ‘over-warned’. The terms are used to describe situations where individuals who are exposed to recurring warning messages about a disaster which then does not eventuate become cynical, apathetic and ‘tired’ of hearing warnings. They may become desensitised to the risk thereby endangering themselves even more. The assumption by practitioners (emergency managers and governmental policy-makers for example) that warning fatigue is a problem presents emergency agencies with a conundrum: they want to avoid the accusation of panicking the public but worry they may run the risk of under-preparing them at the same time. As a result, they may be tempted to err on the side of caution, delay issuing a warning and downplay the possible severity of a potential disaster.Examination of the literature, and an analysis of presentations and news stories have shown that policy-makers, emergency managers, academics and the public use the term ‘cry wolf’ or ‘warning fatigue’ in everyday life. They regard it as conventional wisdom and believe it can influence risk perception and warning response. Nonetheless it has been presumptively assigned by some disaster theorists to the category of a myth. A limited warning fatigue literature has examined the phenomenon in the context of rapid-onset disasters and has concluded that risk perception is not affected by warning fatigue. However, it also suggests there is a direct relationship between warning time, preparedness and response. This allows for the possibility that warning fatigue may not be a myth, but a function of the type of disaster, the frequency of warnings and warning lead-time. This thesis makes a distinction between rapid-onset and prolonged lead-time disasters and hypothesises that prolonged lead-time disasters are responded to in very differently ways than rapid-onset ones. Australian bushfires provide the context in which this research was conducted because bushfires are repeatedly warned about yet rarely (once every ten or twenty years) result in a major disaster. Using social constructionist and social representation theoretical frameworks, and integrating psychosocial and sociological perspectives, this thesis examines the role that warning fatigue plays in the risk perceptions, warning responses and decision-making processes of people living in bushfire-prone areas of Australia. Utilisation of a mixed methods design, a substantive literature review and two rounds of semi-structured interviews resulted in a conceptualisation of a bushfire warning fatigue measure (BWFM). Application of the measure among at-risk Australian communities validated the measure. Through empirical statistical analysis, this standardised instrument was revised (BWFM-R) and used to measure the change in warning fatigue levels over a fire season (November 2011-April 2012). Analysis showed that warning fatigue appears to be multi-faceted comprising five aspects: Trust and credibility, over-warning, false alarms, scepticism and helplessness. It was also found that warning fatigue responses are contextual and interconnected with ‘unofficial’ warnings (such as media stories). The direction of the change and analysis of the qualitative component of the survey implied that unofficial bushfire rhetoric from the media during the winter months may produce a warning fatigue effect, so that when the official warnings were issued at the beginning of the bushfire season, the public were already ‘tired’ of the message. Trust and credibility, over-warning, false alarms, scepticism and helplessness are not new factors in public warning response to disaster communication, but this research demonstrates that they can combine in a unique way to produce ‘warning fatigue’. It proposes that if emergency and disaster agencies differentiate between rapid-onset and prolonged lead-time disasters, understand the complexities of warning fatigue and design their warnings accordingly, then disaster risk communication will become more effective, increasing public engagement and improving disaster response.
机译:警告疲劳或哭狼效应是一种“过度警惕”的必然现象。这些术语用于描述以下情况:暴露于灾难的反复警告消息的个人,然后最终不会变得愤世嫉俗,冷漠和“疲倦”地听到警告。他们可能对这种风险不敏感,从而进一步危害自己。从业人员(例如,紧急情况管理人员和政府政策制定者)​​的假设是警告疲劳是一个问题,这给应急机构带来了一个难题:他们希望避免指责公众感到恐慌,但担心他们可能会面临准备不足的风险与此同时。结果,他们可能会倾向于谨慎行事,延迟发出警告,对潜在灾难的严重程度轻描淡写。对文献的审查以及对演讲和新闻报道的分析表明,决策者,应急管理人员,学者和公众在日常生活中使用“哭狼”或“警告疲劳”一词。他们将其视为常规知识,并认为它会影响风险感知和预警响应。但是,某些灾难理论家已将其推定为一个神话类别。有限的预警疲劳文献在快速发作的灾难中研究了该现象,并得出结论,风险感知不受预警疲劳的影响。但是,这也表明警告时间,准备和响应之间存在直接关系。这使得警告疲劳可能不是神话,而是灾难类型,警告频率和警告提前时间的函数。本文区分了快速发作的灾害和长期的提前期灾害,以及以下假设:长期发作的灾害与快速发作的应对方式截然不同。澳大利亚的丛林大火为进行这项研究提供了背景,因为丛林大火被反复警告,但很少(每十年或二十年一次)会造成重大灾难。本文使用社会建构论和社会代表理论框架,并结合社会心理和社会学观点,研究了警告疲劳在生活在澳大利亚丛林大火地区的人们的风险感知,警告响应和决策过程中的作用。利用混合方法设计,大量文献回顾和两轮半结构化访谈,得出了林区大火预警疲劳度量(BWFM)的概念。该措施在高风险的澳大利亚社区中的应用对该措施进行了验证。通过经验统计分析,对该标准工具进行了修订(BWFM-R),用于测量火灾季节(2011年11月至2012年4月)的警告疲劳水平的变化。分析表明,警告疲劳似乎是多方面的,包括五个方面:信任和信誉,过度警告,错误警报,怀疑和无助。还发现警告疲劳反应与环境有关,并且与“非官方”警告(例如媒体报道)相关联。变化的方向和对调查的定性分析表明,在冬季,来自媒体的非官方林火言论可能会产生警告疲劳效应,因此,在林火季节开始时发布官方警告时,公众已经对该消息“感到厌倦”。信任和信誉,过度警告,错误警报,怀疑和无助并不是对灾害传播的公共预警反应的新因素,但这项研究表明,它们可以以独特的方式结合来产生“警告疲劳”。它建议,如果应急机构和灾难机构区分快速发作的灾害和长期的提前期灾害,了解警告疲劳的复杂性并相应地设计警告,那么灾害风险沟通将变得更加有效,从而提高公众参与度并改善灾害响应。

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    Mackie Brenda;

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  • 年度 2014
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