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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06737510
NA

Improving Emergency Preparedness Among 9/11 Exposed Population: Implementation and Evaluation of an Emergency Preparedness Intervention

Sponsor: New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial will be conducted to compare the effectiveness of a phone-based household emergency preparedness intervention with a mailed informational brochure on household emergency preparedness amongst a sample of World Trade Center Health Registry enrollees residing within New York City.

Official title: Improving Emergency Preparedness Among 9/11 Exposed Population: Implementation and

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 100 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

707

Start Date

2018-11-21

Completion Date

2025-12-25

Last Updated

2025-05-23

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Informational brochure on household emergency preparedness

An informational brochure will be mailed to participants and will cover the following topics: (1) an introduction to why emergency preparedness is important; (2) definition of what a disaster is; (3) family communication plan (including, what is a family communication and evacuation plan, why you should have one, communication plan checklist, family communication card); (4) disaster supplies (including, what types of supplies are needed, how long supplies should last, supply checklist, and storing supplies, including preparing a go bag); and (5) resources (including disaster contact numbers for emergency and non-emergency calls (911 and 311), how to register for emergency notifications ("Notify NCY"), NYC Emergency Management, as well as a website for additional information on preparedness (NYC.gov/hazards) that includes New York City hurricane evacuation zones .

BEHAVIORAL

Phone-based household emergency preparedness

A phone-based intervention will consist of 15 - 20 minutes discussion covering the following topics: (1) an introduction to why emergency preparedness is important; (2) definition of what a disaster is; (3) family communication plan (including, what is a family communication and evacuation plan, why you should have one, communication plan checklist, including a family communication card); (4) disaster supplies (including, what types of supplies are needed, how long supplies should last, supply checklist, and storing supplies); and (5) resources (including providing NYC Emergency Management website: NYC.gov/hazards, i which includes specific information related to the participants New York City hurricane evacuation zones) .

Locations (1)

NYCDOHMH

New York, New York, United States