TY - JOUR PY - 2022// TI - Germs, guns, and fear in disaster response: a rapid qualitative assessment to understand fear-based responses in the population at large: lessons from Sierra Leone 2014-2015 JO - Disaster medicine and public health preparedness A1 - Nally, Cora P. A1 - Van de Voorde, Patrick A1 - Temmerman, Marleen A1 - Adam, Mary SP - ePub EP - ePub VL - ePub IS - ePub N2 - We set out to assess the feasibility of community-focused randomized qualitative assessment at the start of an emergency to identify the root causes of fear-based responses driving the pandemic. We used key informant interviews, focus group discussions, reviewing of government and non-government organization documents, combined with direct field observation. Data were recorded and analyzed for key-themes: (1) lack of evidence-based information about Ebola; (2) lack of support to quarantined families; (3) culturally imbedded practices of caring for ill family members; (4) strong feeling that the government would not help them, and the communities needed to help themselves: (5) distrust of nongovernmental organizations and Ebola treatment centers that the communities viewed as opportunistic. On-the-ground real-time engagement with stakeholders provided deep insight into fear-based-responses during the Ebola epidemic, formed a coherent understanding of how they drove the epidemic, presenting an alternative to the standard disaster-response United Nations-strategy, producing community-driven solutions with local ownership.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1935-7893 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/dmp.2021.358 ID - ref1 ER -