Communicating Heat-Health Information to the Public: Assessing Municipal Government Extreme Heat Event Website Content

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Abstract

Extreme heat events pose a threat to human health. Forecasting and warning strategies have been devel-oped to mitigate heat-health hazards. Yet, studies have found that the public lacks knowledge about their heat-health risks and preventive actions to take to reduce risks. Local governmental websites are an important means to communicate preparedness to the public. The purpose of this study is to examine information provided to the public on municipal government web pages of the 10 most populous U.S. cities. A two-level document and content analyses were conducted. A direct content analysis was conducted using federal government websites and documents to create the Extreme Heat Event Public Response Rubric. The rubric contains two broad categories of populations and actions that are further specified. The rubric was then used to examine local government extreme heat event websites for the 10 most populous cities in the United States. The examination of the local government sites found that information included on the websites failed to identify the breadth of populations at greater risk for adverse heat-health outcomes and omitted some recommended actions designed to prevent adverse heat-health events. Local governments often communicated concrete and simple content to the public but more complex information was not included on their websites.

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APA

Zottarelli, L. K., Blake, S. A., & Garza, M. T. (2022). Communicating Heat-Health Information to the Public: Assessing Municipal Government Extreme Heat Event Website Content. Weather, Climate, and Society, 14(1), 311–321. https://doi.org/10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0019.1

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