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This book presents a roadmap to help guide the actions needed to address health disparities introduced as part of the pre-planning, planning, and mitigation phases of natural and technological disasters.
Chapter 1. Health, Inequalities, and Building a Culture of Preparedness; Chapter 2. Inclusive Preparedness and Emergency Response for Disasters Yet to Come; Chapter 3. Racialized Healthcare Inequities as Determinant of COVID-19 Disaster Risks and Outcomes: Moving Towards COVID-19 Disaster Recovery; Chapter 4. Partnering with Black Organizations to Deliver Vaccine Education in Black Communities; Chapter 5. Towards re-enforcing resilience in crisis: African American family voices during the COVID-19 pandemic; Chapter 6. Understanding How Disasters Worsen Disparities in Non-Communicable Diseases; Chapter 7. Preparedness for Pandemic Disasters to Come; Chapter 8. Cross-National Newspaper Coverage of Climate Change: Community Structure Theory and “Buffered” Health and Female Privilege; Chapter 9. Disaster Response Inclusiveness to Persons with Disabilities and the Elderly in the Philippines; Chapter 10. Gender Dimension of Disasters in Africa: Building a Gender Inclusive Culture of Preparedness; Chapter 11. Pre-existing sociodemographic and health characteristics and trends in confirmed COVID-19 cases in Louisiana; Chapter 12. Social Inequality, COVID-19, and the Delta Wave: Intersections of Race, Gender, and Education; Chapter 13. Convergence of COVID-19 Pandemic Disaster, Mental Health, and Substance Use Disorder; Chapter 14. How Deliberate Planning and Improvisation Shaped Our Response to COVID-19; Chapter 15. Lessons Learned and Moving Forward from Hurricane Katrina: Emergency Response Planning to Build an Inclusive Response Framework; Chapter 16. Health Disparities and Promoting a Culture of Preparedness: Building Resilience and Tangible Trust in an Age of Disasters; Index
Roland J. Thorpe Jr. holds joint appointments in medicine and in neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He is an associate professor of health, behavior and society at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He serves as the director of the Program for Research on Men's Health at the Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions. Dr. Thorpe’s research focuses on racial and socioeconomic health disparities, particularly among U.S. men.
DeMond S. Miller is a Professor of Sociology, Professor of Disaster Science and Emergency Management, and Coordinates the Program in Healthcare Management and Administration. He serves as the Program Director in Disaster Science and Emergency Management. Dr. Miller’s primary area of research specialization are environmental sociology (disaster studies), sustainable disaster recovery, disaster equity studies, emergency services and response, community development, community-based research, and technological disasters, international irregular migration, and acts of terror as disasters.