Building Public Health Emergency Preparedness, Response, and Recovery Capabilities Through Disaster Citizen Science

Perspectives From Local Health Department, Academic, and Community Representatives

Sameer M. Siddiqi, Vishnupriya Kareddy, Lori Uscher-Pines, Ramya Chari

ResearchPosted on rand.org Jul 30, 2025Published in: Journal of Public Health Management and Practice, Volume 29, No. 4, pages 473-486 (July/August 2023). DOI: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001686

Context

Disaster citizen is the use of scientific methods by the public to address preparedness, response, or recovery needs. Disaster citizen science applications with public health relevance are growing in academic and community sectors, but integration with public health emergency preparedness, response, and recovery (PHEPRR) agencies is limited.

Objective

We examined how local health departments (LHDs) and community-based organizations have used citizen science to build public health preparedness and response (PHEP) capabilities. The purpose of this study is to help LHDs make use of citizen science to support PHEPRR.

Design

We conducted semistructured telephone interviews (n = 55) with LHD, academic, and community representatives engaged or interested in citizen science. We used inductive and deductive methods to code and analyze interview transcripts.

Setting

US and international community-based organizations and US LHDs.

Participants

Participants included 18 LHD representatives reflecting diversity in geographic regions and population sizes served and 31 disaster citizen science project leaders and 6 citizen science thought leaders.

Main Outcomes

We identified challenges LHDs and academic and community partners face in using citizen science for PHEPRR as well as strategies to facilitate implementation.

Results

Academic and community-led disaster citizen science activities aligned with many PHEP capabilities including community preparedness, community recovery, public health surveillance and epidemiological investigation, and volunteer management. All participant groups discussed challenges related to resources, volunteer management, collaborations, research quality, and institutional acceptance of citizen science. The LHD representatives noted unique barriers due to legal and regulatory constraints and their role in using citizen science data to inform public health decisions. Strategies to increase institutional acceptance included enhancing policy support for citizen science, increasing volunteer management support, developing best practices for research quality, strengthening collaborations, and adopting lessons learned from relevant PHEPRR activities.

Conclusions

There are challenges to overcome in building PHEPRR capacity for disaster citizen science but also opportunities for LHDs to leverage the growing body of work, knowledge, and resources in academic and community sectors.

Topics

Document Details

  • Availability: Non-RAND
  • Year: 2023
  • Pages: 14
  • Document Number: EP-71013

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