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Connecticut Department of Public Health Keeping Connecticut Healthy * Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication

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Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*Crisis and Emergency Risk Communication

*Purpose

*Emergency risk communication can help people cope, make risk/benefit decisions, and begin to return their lives to normal.

*Attempt to provide the public with information to make the best possible decisions within nearly impossible time constraints and to accept the imperfect nature of choice.

*In a serious crisis, all affected people…

*Take information in differently

*Process information differently

*Act on information differently

*Six Principles of CERC

1. Be First

2. Be Right

3. Be Credible

4. Express Empathy

5. Promote Action

6. Show Respect

*Contributing Factors to Risk

*Increased population density in high-risk areas

*Increased technological risks

*Aging U.S. population

*Emerging infectious diseases and antibiotic resistance

*Increased international travel

*Increased terrorism

*Crisis Communication Lifecycle

Precrisis

• Prepare• Foster alliances• Develop

consensus recommendations

• Test message • Evaluate plans

Initial

• Express empathy• Provide simple risk

explanations• Establish credibility• Recommend

actions• Commit to

stakeholders

Maintenance

• Further explain risk by population groups

• Provide more background

• Gain support for response

• Empower risk/benefit decisionmaking

• Capture feedback for analysis

Resolution

• Educate a primed public for future crises

• Examine problems• Gain support for

policy and resources• Promote your

organization’s role

Evaluation

• Capture lessons learned• Develop an event SWOT• Improve plan• Return to precrisis

planning

*Contributors to a Poor Public Response to Recovery Plans

*Mixed messages from multiple experts

*Information released late

*Paternalistic attitudes

*No reality check on recommendations

*Not countering rumors and myths in real-time

*Public power struggles and confusion

Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*Psychology of a Crisis

*Decision Making in a Crisis Is Different

*People simplify

*Cling to current beliefs

*We remember what we see or previously experience (first messages carry more weight)

*Look for additional information and opinions

*Limit intake of new information (3-7 bits)

*Responding to a Crisis

*Accept and involve the public as a legitimate partner.

*Listen to the audience.

*Be honest, frank, and open.

*Coordinate and collaborate with other credible sources.

*Meet the needs of the media.

Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*Messages and Audiences

*Audience Relationship to Event

*Judging the Message

*Speed counts

*Facts

*Trust and credibility

*Trust is an important component of our ability of getting people to do what we want them to do in an emergency

*Key Elements To Build Trust

*Intention toward the receiver

*Empathy

*Caring

*Commitment

*Dedication

*Expertise

*Trustworthiness

Accuracy of Information

__________

Speed of Release

Empathy+

Openness

CREDIBILITY

Successful Communication

=+

TRUST

*Initial Message

Must

*Be short

*Be relevant

*Give positive action steps (stick to 3 or 4)

*Be repeated

*Initial Message

Must Not

*Use jargon

*Be judgmental

*Make promises that can’t be kept

*Include humor

*Speculate

Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*Spokesperson

*Spokepersons

*They give your organization its human form.

*Effective spokespersons connect with their audience.

*Effective spokespersons are made; few are born.

*The spokesperson doesn’t just read a statement; he or she is the statement.

*Emergency Risk Communication Principles

*Establish appropriate level of concern and empathy.

*Remain calm.

*Don’t over-reassure.

*Show competence and consistency.

*Demonstrate openness and transparency.

*Be involved in message development to ensure some ownership.

*Emergency Risk Communication Principles

*Acknowledge uncertainty.

*Emphasize that a process is in place to learn more.

*Give anticipatory guidance.

*Be regretful, not defensive.

*Acknowledge people’s fears.

*Emergency Risk Communication Principles

*Acknowledge the shared misery.

*Express wishes.

*Be willing to address the “what if” questions.

*Give people things to do.

*Ask more of people.

*Pitfalls for Spokespersons

*Use of jargon

*Overly complex messages

*Humor

*Repeating the negative

*Expressing personal opinions

*Showing off your vocabulary

*Using one-liners, clichés, and off-the-cuff remarks

Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*Working With the Media

*Disasters Are Media Events

*We need the media to be there.

*Play a critical role in informing the public during any crisis or disaster.

*Give important protective actions for the public.

*Know how to reach their audiences and what their audiences need.

*TV and radio are particularly important in crises that develop quickly.

*The Media Today

*Print and TV audiences are smaller and older

*Many younger people rely on Web-based news sources

*Audiences are increasingly fragmented

*Media can now provide immediate and continuous updates on a crisis through contributions from people experiencing the crisis

*Increased demand on organizations to keep pace with information delivery

*Media’s Role

*Telling the public something is happening and that they need to pay attention

*Directing the public to sources of additional information

*Television and radio are particularly important in crises that develop quickly

Connecticut Department of Public HealthKeeping Connecticut Healthy

*CERC, Social Media, and Mobile Media Devices

*What is Social Media?

*Interactive online media that make it easy for users to participate and contribute content

*Allows users to:

*Interact

*Engage in dialogue

*Create and share experiences

*Two-way communication

*Advantages of Social Media

*Provides immediate information

*Can create rapid connections and build relationships with the public

*Helps build and maintain dynamic relationships with the media

*Advantages of Social Media

*Helps dispel rumors by immediately providing accurate information

*Incorporates website links where media outlets and the public can obtain more detailed information

*Works in support of a broader communication strategy

*Disadvantages of Social Media

*Some people mistrust social media or don’t know how to use them.

*Personnel and technology are required

*Continual monitoring and following up are needed

*Limited to terms of how much info can be included

*Some audiences do not use social media

*Some people post to start controversy

Pew Research Center, February 14, 2013, http://www.pewinternet.org/~/media//Files/Reports/2013/PIP_SocialMediaUsers.pdf

*DPH Social Media Users

*Social Media: During a Crisis

*Immediacy of social media is an important feature during a crisis

*Most immediate forms, like microblogging (Twitter) and social media (Facebook) will be prevalent in early stages

*Stakeholders become key sources of information

*Social Media: During a Crisis

*Social Media: During a Crisis

*Hurricane Sandy

*310 storm-related tweets from October 25 – November 7

*68 storm-related posts on Facebook from October 25 – November 8

*1,732 clicks through bit.ly from October 26 – November 8

*February Blizzard 2013

*Social Media: During a Crisis

*Join the conversation, help manage rumors by responding to misinformation, and determine the best channels to reach segmented audiences

*Check all information for accuracy and respond honestly to questions

*Recognize that the media are already using social media

*Remember social media is interpersonal communication

*Questions?

Diana Lejardi, MPH, CHES

Connecticut Department of Public Health

Office of Communications

[email protected]

(860) 509-7599

www.ct.gov/dph/cerc