Population Impact, Recovery, and Resilience

Population Impact, Recovery, and Resilience
Population Impact Recovery and Resilience
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Social Science + Public Health Theory

The Program on Population Impact, Recovery, and Resilience  (PiR2) applies social science and public health theory and methods to improving the health and well-being of communities and populations affected by disasters.

About Pir2

Pir2

PiR2 lab is an academic center devoted to studying and improving the health and well-being of populations affected by, or at-risk of, complex hazards and disasters. Mathematically, PiR2 is an equation describing the area of a circle.  Its elegance is that it works for any size circle, large or small.  This epitomizes our goal: to measure recovery and resilience within any size community, and to account for the multiple social, economic, and cultural systems that influence the health and well-being of the populations living within it.

Lead by Dr. David Abramson, founding director of the Program on Population Impact, Recovery and Resilience, the PiR2 team is comprised of NYU faculty and students as well as a large network of affiliated faculty drawn from multiple disciplines and settings.

Meet the Team

The research group has developed a social-ecological conceptual framework that it has applied to various disaster cases. These include Hurricane Katrina and the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf Coast, Hurricane Sandy in New Jersey, and to risk perception and behaviors surrounding the Zika virus.

Read More

In the Field: ZIKA

In 2016, the World Health Organization declared the Zika virus a global public health emergency. Since then, our research team has examined how people think about health risks related to the Zika virus.
Meet the Team

Faculty and Staff:

David Abramson, PhD MPH Clinical Associate Professor, PiR2 Director
Alexis Merdjanoff, PhD Clinical Assistant Professor, PiR2 Director of Research
Rachael Piltch-Loeb, MSPH GPH Doctoral Student, Assistant Research Scientist
Sarah Friedman, LMSW Assistant Research Scientist

Affiliated Faculty

Lauren Clay, PhD MPH D’Youville College
Assistant Professor of Health Services Administration, Affiliated Faculty at the Disaster Research Center

Andy Garrett, MD MPH, US Department of Health and Human Services
Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Senior Medical Advisor, Former Director of National Disaster Medical System

Laurie Johnson, PhD AICP Laurie Johnson Consulting
Author of “After Great Disasters: An In-depth Analysis of How Six Countries Managed Community Recovery” and “Clear as Mud: Planning for the Rebuilding of New Orleans”

Karine Kleinhaus, MD MPH Pluristem Therapeutics
Divisional Vice President, North America, Adjunct Associate Professor at New York University College of Global Public Health 

Brian Mayer, PhD University of Arizona
Associate Professor in the School of Sociology, Affiliated Faculty of the Institute on the Environment and the Mel and Enid Zuckerman School of Public Health.

Yoon Soo Park, PhD University of Illinois – College of Medicine at Chicago 
Professor of Medical Education, Affiliated Researcher at University of Chicago 

Lori Peek, PhD MEd University of Colorado Boulder 
Professor of Sociology, Director of the Natural Hazards Center, Institute of Behavioral Science

Disaster Research Works Staff

Amber Goff, MBA
Jyaphia Christos-Rodgers, MS

Current Students

Aditi Molly Bhanja
Amila Samarabandu
Yannai Segal

Previous Students

Esther Annan 
Anna-Belle Buyse
Onome Eka
Emma Giegerich
Charissa Isidro
Nafesa Kanneh
Ayushi Mathur
Elyse Morris
Jenn Ohn
Mabel Segbafah

Research

Hurricane Katrina

Gulf-Coast Child and Family Health Study (G-CAFH)

The Gulf Coast Child and Family Health (G-CAFH) study is a longitudinal cohort study of Katrina survivors. Six months following Hurricane Katrina, David Abramson, then at  the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, partnered with the Children’s Health Fund to conduct a household survey of the health and well-being of 1,079 randomly sampled households in Louisiana and Mississippi. Four rounds of data were collected at Columbia University between 2006 - 2010.

Katrina@10: Demographic and Health Disparities in Recovery from Hurricane Katrina (K10)

Katrina@10 is an NIH-funded center grant which leverages three longitudinal cohorts, including the Gulf Coast Child and Family Health Study. Researchers at Tulane University, Harvard University, and New York University are presently exploring population recovery a decade after Hurricane Katrina.

Women and Their Children’s Health (WaTCH)

The Women and Their Children’s Health (WaTCH) study,  funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, examines the health effects of the Gulf Coast Oil Spill on families living along the Gulf Coast with a focus on identifying factors that increase resilience. Louisiana State University faculty Dr. Ed Peters and Ed Trapido are the principal investigators, and NYU faculty member David Abramson is the principal investigator of the children’s portion of the study.  

Read the findings in  The Resilience Activation Framework: a Conceptual Model of How Access to Social Resources Promotes Adaptation and Rapid Recovery in Post-disaster Settings

Hurricane Sandy

Sandy Child and Family Health Study (S-CAFH)

The New Jersey Department of Health supported a joint research team from PiR2, the Institute for Families at Rutgers University School of Social Work, the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University’s Earth Institute, and Center for Disaster and Risk Analysis at Colorado State University to conduct the 1,000-household Sandy Child and Family Health Study, a representative population study of the hurricane’s effect on the population of New Jersey, one of the largest disaster recovery projects and assessments in the region.  

Read Hurricane Sandy PLACE Report: Evacuation Decisions, Housing Issues and Sense of Community and the Hurricane Sandy PERSON Report: Disaster Exposure, Health Impacts, Economic Burden, and Social Well-Being.

Deep Water Horizon Oil Spill

Gulf Coast Population Impact Project (GCPI)

The Gulf Coast Population Impact Project was a 4-phase project that conducted two cross-sectional studies across three years. In 2010, led by the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University’s Earth Institute in partnership with the Children’s Health Fund, 1,203 adult residents living in Louisiana and Mississippi within 10 miles of the coastline were interviewed by telephone through the Marist Poll. In 2012, 1,437 households were interviewed in- person across Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texa with funding from the Baton Rouge Area Foundation. Read the findings in the Impact on Children and Families of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Children’s Health after the Oil Spill: A Four-State Study Findings from the Gulf Coast Population Impact (GCPI) Project
 

Zika  

Zika Risk Salience and Evolving Risk Communication Challenges

Funded by the National Science Foundation, this research examines how various social, scientific, and policy cues influence the US public’s appreciation of the risk of the Zika virus over time, as well as the public’s receptivity to various clinical, environmental, and behavioral interventions. Read the Zika Briefing Report #1, US Public’s Perception of Zika Risk: Awareness, Knowledge, and Receptivity to Public Health Intervention and Risk salience of a novel virus: US population risk perception, knowledge, and receptivity to public health interventions regarding the Zika virus prior to local transmission.

The Zika Women’s Panel Study

The Zika Women’s Panel Study, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, assesses intra-individual change in risk perception of the Zika virus among a panel of 200 women of child-bearing age as the science and the epidemiology evolve.  

The Zika Provider Study

In collaboration with New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the PiR2 research team assessed perception of risk and recommendations on Zika among 1,409 New York City health care providers through an online, emailed survey.

From Paper to Tablets: Gulf Oil Spill Research goes mobile with AT&T

Our research team is dedicated to collecting data rapidly and seamlessly. Critical to the success of these primary data collection efforts is the blend of community engagement and technology.

Research to Action

SHOREline is a project-based learning initiative active in Gulf Coast and NYC high schools, designed to foster skills, hope, and opportunities among disaster-affected or at-risk communities and youth.
Coursework

Public Health Emergency Preparedness and Response - A Global Perspective (GU-9345)
Disasters, Complex Systems, and the Social Ecology of Health (GU-2260)

Read more about these classes.

Contact Us

Email: pir2@gmail.com 
David Abramson, PiR2 Director: david.abramson@nyu.edu 
Alexis Merdjanoff, PiR2 Director of Research: alexis.merdjanoff@nyu.edu