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Published in: Journal of Community Health 2/2011

01-04-2011 | Original paper

After the Waters Receded: A Qualitative Study of University Official’s Disaster Experiences During the Great Iowa Flood of 2008

Authors: Erin P. Fillmore, Marizen Ramirez, Lisa Roth, McKaylee Robertson, Christopher G. Atchison, Corinne Peek-Asa

Published in: Journal of Community Health | Issue 2/2011

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Abstract

When the Great Flood of 2008 hit towns across Eastern Iowa, officials from the University of Iowa shut its operations for a week, relocated and evacuated students and community residents, and suffered damage to over a dozen buildings. This study is a qualitative assessment of the experiences and perceptions of twelve university officials involved in the response and management of the disaster. Major themes are presented according to phases of the Disaster Management Cycle. During the preparedness phase, an established all-hazards plan as well as specific annexes for flooding and pandemic influenza proved to enhance community response to the flood. However, training university clientele across a large organization to execute these plans and respond to future disasters is not an easy task. The content and effective means for delivering these trainings are areas for further research. During the response phase of the flood, officials swiftly expedited a business continuity plan to assure that personnel were paid during the university closure. However, enforcing a policy to avoid coming to work during the closure was challenging. Thus, future work must be done to determine and implement effective disaster communications that relay clear messages about roles and responsibilities. Now, in recovery, the university must rebuild its infrastructure and consider potential mental health issues. Lessons learned from the Great Flood of 2008 provide the opportunity to self-assess and prepare universities for disasters in the future.
Footnotes
1
The Critical Incident Management Plan is designed to maximize human survival and preservation of property, minimize danger, restore normal operations of the University, and assure responsive communications with the University, surrounding neighborhoods and cities. This Plan is set in operation whenever a natural or induced crisis affecting the University reaches proportions that cannot be handled by established measures. A crisis may be sudden and unforeseen, or there may be varying periods of warning. This Plan is intended to be sufficiently flexible to accommodate contingencies of all types, magnitudes, and duration. http://​www.​uiowa.​edu/​~pubsfty/​cimp.​pdf
 
2
The Hawk Alert System is used to notify the campus community of threats to physical safety in emergency situations (tornado, violence, hazardous material incident, and so on).  Hawk Alert allows UI administrators to send recorded or electronic emergency messages (“Hawk Alerts”) to UI students, faculty, and staff by mobile phone, home phone, office phone, and e-mail (all at once), using contact information from the University’s Enterprise Directory (updated via ISIS or Employee Self Service). The entire campus community can be notified in about 15 min. (http://​hawkalert.​uiowa.​edu/​).
 
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Metadata
Title
After the Waters Receded: A Qualitative Study of University Official’s Disaster Experiences During the Great Iowa Flood of 2008
Authors
Erin P. Fillmore
Marizen Ramirez
Lisa Roth
McKaylee Robertson
Christopher G. Atchison
Corinne Peek-Asa
Publication date
01-04-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Community Health / Issue 2/2011
Print ISSN: 0094-5145
Electronic ISSN: 1573-3610
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10900-010-9312-z

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