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Exploratory Qualitative Study of Fire Preparedness Among High-rise Building Residents. | LitMetric

Exploratory Qualitative Study of Fire Preparedness Among High-rise Building Residents.

PLoS Curr

Global Health Nursing, School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA.

Published: August 2018

Introduction: Fire hazards are an extreme risk to occupants of high-rise buildings. Little attention has been paid to emergency and evacuation preparedness among people living in high-rise buildings. This paper reports on emergency fire preparedness among residents of a high-rise building that has experienced multiple fires in the past.

Methods: An exploratory qualitative pilot study was conducted using key informant interviews. Six residents participated. Themes on preparedness for fires and emergency evacuation were extracted.

Results: Findings indicated varying levels of preparedness for fires and emergency evacuation among residents. Factors influencing residents' emergency preparedness included fire risk perception, owner or renter status, and building-level emergency preparedness. Fire alarms were considered to be an ineffective evacuation cue. Severe cues such as seeing fire or smoke were more likely to prompt evacuation. Participants provided a series of suggestions to keep high-rise residents safe during fire emergencies.

Discussion: The study revealed fire preparedness knowledge, decision-making processes, and actual behaviors of residential high-rise occupants who experienced a fire emergency in their building. Main findings of the study are discussed in two themes: influences on fire emergency and evacuation preparedness, and evacuation decision-making and response to fire. Results from this pilot study will be used as the basis for a follow up study involving residents from multiple high-rise buildings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6128701PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/currents.dis.aa27444baa486dc3d5b3fa7c28009b22DOI Listing

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