2013 Research Brief (Number 02): Emergency Alerting and Age

Citizens with disabilities are at once the most vulnerable during an emergency, and the most likely to have greater access challenges to communications media than the rest of the population. Consequently, finding technological solutions that ensure access is critical to an effective emergency communications and emergency management plan.

This Wireless RERC research brief examines the effects of age on use of various media to receive and share public alert Information by people with disabilities.  The data presented in this paper were collected from our Emergency Communications Survey.  

Two questions in the Emergency Communications Survey in particular shed light on patterns of technology use by people with disabilities during public disasters and emergencies across age cohorts.  These questions are:

1.      For the most recent instance when you received a public emergency alert, how were you alerted?

2.      If you shared the alert information for the most public alert you received, how did you share it?

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The Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center for Wireless Technologies is sponsored by the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under grant number 90RE5007-01-00. The opinions contained in this website are those of the Wireless RERC and do not necessarily reflect those of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services or NIDILRR.