Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review. / Phraknoi, Nichapa; Sutanto, Juliana; Hu, Yang et al.
In: International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, Vol. 96, 103809, 01.10.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Harvard

Phraknoi, N, Sutanto, J, Hu, Y, Goh, YS & Lee, CE 2023, 'Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review', International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, vol. 96, 103809. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809

APA

Phraknoi, N., Sutanto, J., Hu, Y., Goh, Y. S., & Lee, C. E. (2023). Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 96, Article 103809. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809

Vancouver

Phraknoi N, Sutanto J, Hu Y, Goh YS, Lee CE. Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 2023 Oct 1;96:103809. Epub 2023 Aug 31. doi: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809

Author

Phraknoi, Nichapa ; Sutanto, Juliana ; Hu, Yang et al. / Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response : A Systematic Literature Review. In: International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. 2023 ; Vol. 96.

Bibtex

@article{c3a6ac067479460f925d58072401738b,
title = "Older People{\textquoteright}s Needs in Urban Disaster Response: A Systematic Literature Review",
abstract = "Against the backdrop of rapid population ageing and widespread urbanisation, this review explores older people{\textquoteright}s needs in urban disaster response. We conducted a systematic review of 120 publications across several related fields – disaster management, gerontology, and urban governance. We identified five needs of older people in disaster response: health, socioeconomic, evacuation and settlement, information and communication, and cultural needs. We find that older adults{\textquoteright} needs were insufficiently met for four main reasons. First, a lack of understanding of the relationships between different needs poses challenges to coordinating disaster response, particularly when relief aid targets different needs in an uncoordinated fashion. Second, standard disaster response often provides unsuitable aid to older people, leaving them feeling uncomfortable, unequal, and undignified. Third, there is a discrepancy between policy expectations and actual disaster response, resulting in inadequate incorporation of older people{\textquoteright}s needs into disaster response at local, national, and international levels. Fourth, there is a relative lack of advocacy that directly gives voice to older people rather than indirectly reflecting their needs through carers and disaster responders. To address research and knowledge gaps, we propose five directions for future research: (1) a need for conceptually informed, contextually salient, and transparent working definitions of older people, (2) a need for nuanced intersectional understandings of older people{\textquoteright}s needs, (3) a holistic understanding of the disaster ecology of older people{\textquoteright}s different needs, (4) a focus on secondary disasters arising from primary disasters, and (5) a need for more theoretically informed and empirically rigorous research.",
keywords = "Disaster response, Need, Older people, systematic review, Urban",
author = "Nichapa Phraknoi and Juliana Sutanto and Yang Hu and Goh, {Yi Sheng} and Lee, {Cheng Ean (Catherine)}",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809",
language = "English",
volume = "96",
journal = "International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction",
issn = "2212-4209",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Older People’s Needs in Urban Disaster Response

T2 - A Systematic Literature Review

AU - Phraknoi, Nichapa

AU - Sutanto, Juliana

AU - Hu, Yang

AU - Goh, Yi Sheng

AU - Lee, Cheng Ean (Catherine)

PY - 2023/10/1

Y1 - 2023/10/1

N2 - Against the backdrop of rapid population ageing and widespread urbanisation, this review explores older people’s needs in urban disaster response. We conducted a systematic review of 120 publications across several related fields – disaster management, gerontology, and urban governance. We identified five needs of older people in disaster response: health, socioeconomic, evacuation and settlement, information and communication, and cultural needs. We find that older adults’ needs were insufficiently met for four main reasons. First, a lack of understanding of the relationships between different needs poses challenges to coordinating disaster response, particularly when relief aid targets different needs in an uncoordinated fashion. Second, standard disaster response often provides unsuitable aid to older people, leaving them feeling uncomfortable, unequal, and undignified. Third, there is a discrepancy between policy expectations and actual disaster response, resulting in inadequate incorporation of older people’s needs into disaster response at local, national, and international levels. Fourth, there is a relative lack of advocacy that directly gives voice to older people rather than indirectly reflecting their needs through carers and disaster responders. To address research and knowledge gaps, we propose five directions for future research: (1) a need for conceptually informed, contextually salient, and transparent working definitions of older people, (2) a need for nuanced intersectional understandings of older people’s needs, (3) a holistic understanding of the disaster ecology of older people’s different needs, (4) a focus on secondary disasters arising from primary disasters, and (5) a need for more theoretically informed and empirically rigorous research.

AB - Against the backdrop of rapid population ageing and widespread urbanisation, this review explores older people’s needs in urban disaster response. We conducted a systematic review of 120 publications across several related fields – disaster management, gerontology, and urban governance. We identified five needs of older people in disaster response: health, socioeconomic, evacuation and settlement, information and communication, and cultural needs. We find that older adults’ needs were insufficiently met for four main reasons. First, a lack of understanding of the relationships between different needs poses challenges to coordinating disaster response, particularly when relief aid targets different needs in an uncoordinated fashion. Second, standard disaster response often provides unsuitable aid to older people, leaving them feeling uncomfortable, unequal, and undignified. Third, there is a discrepancy between policy expectations and actual disaster response, resulting in inadequate incorporation of older people’s needs into disaster response at local, national, and international levels. Fourth, there is a relative lack of advocacy that directly gives voice to older people rather than indirectly reflecting their needs through carers and disaster responders. To address research and knowledge gaps, we propose five directions for future research: (1) a need for conceptually informed, contextually salient, and transparent working definitions of older people, (2) a need for nuanced intersectional understandings of older people’s needs, (3) a holistic understanding of the disaster ecology of older people’s different needs, (4) a focus on secondary disasters arising from primary disasters, and (5) a need for more theoretically informed and empirically rigorous research.

KW - Disaster response

KW - Need

KW - Older people

KW - systematic review

KW - Urban

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809

DO - 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103809

M3 - Review article

VL - 96

JO - International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction

JF - International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction

SN - 2212-4209

M1 - 103809

ER -