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Journal Article

Citation

Douglas R, Kocatepe A, Barrett AE, Ozguven EE, Gumber C. J. Gerontol. B Psychol. Sci. Soc. Sci. 2019; 74(6): 1032-1040.

Affiliation

Department of Sociology, Florida State University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Gerontological Society of America, Publisher Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/geronb/gbx119

PMID

29029345

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Pets influence evacuation decisions, but little is known about pet-friendly emergency shelters' availability or older adults' need for them. Our study addresses this issue, focusing on the most densely populated area of Florida (Miami-Dade)-the state with the oldest population and greatest hurricane susceptibility.

METHOD: We use Geographic Information Systems (GIS)-based methodology to identify the shortest paths to pet-friendly shelters, based on distance and congested and uncongested travel times-taking into account the older population's spatial distribution. Logistic regression models using the 2013 American Housing Survey's Disaster Planning Module examine anticipated shelter use as a function of pet ownership and requiring pet evacuation assistance.

RESULTS: Thirty-four percent of older adults in the Miami-Dade area have pets-35% of whom report needing pet evacuation assistance. However, GIS accessibility measures show that travel time factors are likely to impede older adults' use of the area's few pet-friendly shelters. Logistic regression results reveal that pet owners are less likely to report anticipating shelter use; however, the opposite holds for pet owners reporting they would need help evacuating their pets-they anticipate using shelters.

DISCUSSION: High pet shelter need coupled with low availability exacerbates older adults' heightened vulnerability during Florida's hurricane season.


Language: en

Keywords

Emergency preparedness/disaster response; Public policy; Transportation

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