Protective Decision-Making in Bushfire Part 1: A Rapid Systematic Review of the ‘Wait and See’ Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Australian Bushfire Safety Policy and Protective Response
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Definitions
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Databases and Sources Searched
2.4. Literature Search, Screening, and Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment of Studies
- Justification of the article’s importance for the Readership;
- Statement of concrete aims or formulation of question;
- Description of the literature search;
- The use of referencing to support statements;
- Scientific reasoning to appropriately present evidence and;
- Appropriate presentation of data.
2.6. Data Extraction and Synthesis of Final Papers
2.7. Analysis and Interpretation of Data
3. Results
- Author;
- Study objective or research question;
- Method or study type;
- Participants or study context;
- Outcome or findings of the study;
- Significance or implications of the study and;
- A quality rating using the SANRA scale.
- The extent that people confronting bushfire threat ‘wait and see’;
- Why delaying protective action is a concern for emergency services authorities, operational practitioners, bushfire safety practitioners and policy makers;
- Why people chose to delay before deciding on a protective response including their self-evacuation archetypal characteristics;
- The influence of information and warnings;
- The influence of gender and other demographic factors;
- How those who intend to stay and defend their property but leave are, in effect, waiting and seeing and;
- The policy implications of delaying protective action in bushfire.
3.1. Extent of the Wait and See Issue
3.2. Waiting and Seeing in Bushfire Is of Concern
3.3. Reasons People Delay Their Protective Decision Making in Bushfire
- Others close to them would prefer that approach (Subjective Norms);
- They have a moral obligation to wait (Moral Norms);
- The opinions of others have little influence (Self-Determination);
- They are not anxious about waiting (Anticipated Affect) [45].
3.4. Influence of Information and Warnings on Waiting and Seeing
3.5. Gender and Other Characteristics of People Who Wait and See’
3.6. Those Who Stay to Defend but Leave
3.7. Policy Implications of Wait and See
- Promoting the identification and application of personal evacuation triggers (as part of a clear contingency plan) [49] for safe evacuation, rather than solely relying on the receipt of official warnings from fire authorities.
- Programs to assist people to develop sophisticated triggers based on clear identification of an imminent threat requiring immediate evacuation [45].
- Reducing perceived inconvenience of leaving by providing advice on basic preparation and planning for safe evacuation.
- Further improving warnings to enable clear understanding and less uncertainty about the extent and immediacy of threat (including enhancing accuracy, timeliness, detail, local specificity, personalisation—not generic) to promote early protective decision making and action.
- Extending risk education to highlight the extreme danger of late evacuation or sheltering in an unprepared refuge.
- Addressing the property protection side of the wait and see dilemma by demonstrating the property preparation required for reduced vulnerability and improved likelihood it will survive in the householder’s absence. Highlight low effort and cost actions (clearing vegetation and combustibles rather than retrofitting home) to reduce house vulnerability.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Database | Search String ‘Wait and See’ | Area of Document |
---|---|---|
Scopus | ‘Wait and see’ OR ‘delay’ AND (bushfire OR wildfire) | All fields |
Science Direct | ‘Wait and see’ OR ‘delay’ AND (bushfire OR wildfire) | Document |
Google Scholar | With the exact phrase: ‘Wait and see’ OR delay With at least one of the words: bushfire, wildfire | Anywhere in the article |
Author/Citation | Study Objective | Method/Study Type | Participants/Context | Sample Size | Outcome/Findings on ‘Wait and See’ | Significance/Implications Regarding ‘Wait and See’ | Quality Rating (max =12) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Whittaker et al., 2013 [5] | Factors influencing patterns of life and property loss and survival in the Black Saturday bushfires. | Quantitative mail-out surveys. | Fire-affected households. | 1314 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (1) Pres (2) Total = 10 |
McLennan, 2014. [48] | Learnings from Parkerville (2014) bushfire. | Qualitative semi-structured face-to-face interviews. | Fire-affected households. | 91 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (1) Ref (2) Reason (1) Pres (2) Total = 9 |
McNeill et al., 2015 [49] | What predicts fire response decision delay. | Quantitative mail-out surveys (T1 and T2). | Fire-prone urban, peri-urban and rural communities. | 182 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (2) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (1) Pres (2) Total = 11 |
Whittaker et al., 2009 [50] | Human behavioural factors affecting personal safety and property protection during the Black Saturday bushfires. | Qualitative semi-structured, face-to-face interviews. | Fire-affected households. | 301 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (2) Search (1) Ref (1) Reason (1) Pres (2) Total = 9 |
Handmer et al., 2016 [51] | How the ‘stay or go’ bushfire safety policy performed in the Black Saturday bushfires. | Analysis of police and coronial records. | Civilian fatalities of the Black Saturday bushfires. | 172 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (2) Search (1) Ref (2 Reason (2) Pres (1) Total = 10 |
McLennan et al., 2013 [8] | Examine protective action decisions taken by householders under bushfire threat. | Qualitative semi-structured, face-to-face interviews. | Fire-affected households. | 496 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (1) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 10 |
Whittaker et al., 2020, [52] | How people threatened and affected by bushfire, understood, interpreted and acted on warning messages. |
| Fire-threatened and -affected households. | 113 interviews 549 surveys. |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 11 |
McLennan et al., 2013 [45] | Better understand the factors influencing the choice of protective action in bushfire. | Postal and on-line survey. | Fire-prone urban, peri -urban and rural communities. | 584 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 11 |
McLennan et al., 2012 [37] | Explores reasons why people wait and see and implications for bushfire safety policy. | Postal and on-line survey. | Fire-prone urban, peri -urban and rural communities. | 164 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 11 |
Edgeley and Paveglio, 2019 [53] | Explores the influence of pre-fire preparation and event-based cues on intended protective behaviour. | Drop off and pick up, mail and on-line surveys. | Three zones:
| 1349 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (2) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 11 |
Strahan 2020, [54] | Links decisions to delay protective action in wildfire with attitudes and behaviour related to seven self-evacuation archetypes | Quantitative telephone survey. | Fire-affected households. | 457 |
|
| Imp (2) Aims (1) Search (1) Ref (2) Reason (2) Pres (2) Total = 10 |
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Strahan, K.; Gilbert, J. Protective Decision-Making in Bushfire Part 1: A Rapid Systematic Review of the ‘Wait and See’ Literature. Fire 2021, 4, 4. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire4010004
Strahan K, Gilbert J. Protective Decision-Making in Bushfire Part 1: A Rapid Systematic Review of the ‘Wait and See’ Literature. Fire. 2021; 4(1):4. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire4010004
Chicago/Turabian StyleStrahan, Kenneth, and John Gilbert. 2021. "Protective Decision-Making in Bushfire Part 1: A Rapid Systematic Review of the ‘Wait and See’ Literature" Fire 4, no. 1: 4. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire4010004
APA StyleStrahan, K., & Gilbert, J. (2021). Protective Decision-Making in Bushfire Part 1: A Rapid Systematic Review of the ‘Wait and See’ Literature. Fire, 4(1), 4. https://doi.org/10.3390/fire4010004