Rapid risk assessment for communicable diseases in humanitarian emergencies: validation of a rapid risk assessment tool for communicable disease risk in humanitarian emergencies

Authors

  • Charlotte Christiane Hammer University of East Anglia
  • Julii Brainard University of East Anglia
  • Paul R Hunter University of East Anglia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31646/gbio.24

Keywords:

communicable diseases, disasters, epidemiology, health protection, humanitarian emergencies, risk assessment

Abstract

Background: Communicable diseases pose a significant risk in humanitarian emergencies. This paper reports on the development and validation of a rapid risk assessment tool for communicable diseases in humanitarian emergencies. Methods: We developed a tool assessing the 20 most critical risk factors for disease outbreaks in humanitarian emergencies. This paper reports on the development and validation of the tool consisting of face and content validation with key informant interviews (n=25) and a reliability validation (inter-rater reliability test) with groups of volunteer aid workers (n=4 groups). Findings: Face and content validation confirmed the importance of rapid risk assessment methods and the suitability and usefulness of the developed tool. Participants without prior health protection experience were able fill in the tool with an accuracy of 81·25% (SD 4.08) across both scenarios (82·35% and 80·15% for scenarios 1 and 2 respectively). Errors primarily occurred when judging the severity of risk factors that could not be captured quantitatively. Revisions of the tool have been made based on the validation process. Conclusion: The tool was successfully validated for the use in different humanitarian emergency settings and is suitable for users with and without experience in health protection.

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Published

2019-05-29

How to Cite

Hammer, C. C., Brainard, J., & Hunter, P. R. (2019). Rapid risk assessment for communicable diseases in humanitarian emergencies: validation of a rapid risk assessment tool for communicable disease risk in humanitarian emergencies. Global Biosecurity, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.31646/gbio.24

Issue

Section

Research Articles
Received 2019-02-12
Accepted 2019-05-23
Published 2019-05-29