Level of Awareness on Disaster Risk Preparedness in Informal Settlements of Nyeri Town, Nyeri County, Kenya.

Authors

  • Zachary K. Muriuki Meru University of Science and Technology
  • Professor Robert Kei Meru University of Science and Technology
  • Dr John Munderu Muchiri Kenya Methodist University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47941/ijhs.1053
Abstract views: 249
PDF downloads: 229

Keywords:

Awareness, Disasters Risks, Policies, Preparedness

Abstract

Purpose: The main objective of this study was to assess level of awareness on disaster risk preparedness in informal settlements of Nyeri town, Nyeri County, Kenya. To achieve this, the study was guided by two specific objectives: to establish the level of awareness on the types of disasters that can affect the informal settlement residents in Nyeri town and to determine the level of awareness on the existence of disaster risk reduction policies to curb disasters among the people living in informal settlements of Nyeri town.

Methodology: The study adopted a descriptive research design using primary data collected through a structured questionnaire. The population for this study was 384 respondents of the four settlements of Nyeri town, that is, Majengo Witemere Ngangarithi,mathari and Ruring’u Muslim village.

Results: The study found out that, majority of the respondents 93.0% was aware of the disasters that can affect them in their area of residents. The study further established that, majority of the residents 196 (51.0%) was aware of the existence of disaster risk reduction policies as compared to 49.0% who were not aware of any disaster risk reduction policy. The results also showed that there was a significant association between the level of education of the respondents and the level of awareness of the disaster that could affect them [X2 (3) = 14.848, p-value =0.002<0.05] and the religions of the respondents and the level of awareness of the disaster that could affect them [X2 (2) = 7.090, p-value =0.029<0.05]. The results however indicated that, there was no significant association between the level of awareness of the disaster that could affect the respondents with the area of residents, age of the respondents and their occupation as given by the p-values of 0.393, 0.485 and 0.390 respectively. The study further established that, there was a significant association between the education level of the respondents and the level of awareness of any policy rule concerning with disaster risk reduction [X2 (3) = 8.056, p-value =0.045<0.05], and the religions of the respondents and the level of awareness of any policy rule concerning with disaster risk reduction [X2 (2) = 10.031, p-value =0.007<0.05].

Unique Contribution to Theory, Policy and Practice: It was concluded that Risk assessment as a step for successful disaster reduction measures will ensure that the community members are aware of the possible hazards. National and County government should incorporate the national and international policies and guidelines in their policy. The Government should be keen on learning on previous disasters that have affected other informal settlements and other parts of the country by having disaster management well kwon by the communities living in informal sectors. The researcher further recommends to the scholars to consider research on Disaster risk preparedness as the strategy of counties development agenda and Social and economic potentials that the County Governments can tap in informal settlements.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Zachary K. Muriuki , Meru University of Science and Technology

Department of Public Health of the School of Health Sciences

Professor Robert Kei , Meru University of Science and Technology

Department of Public Health of the School of Health Sciences

Dr John Munderu Muchiri, Kenya Methodist University

Director of Research

References

Armitage, C.J. and Conner, M. (2001) Efficacy of the Theory of Planned Behaviour: A Meta-Analytic Review. British Journal of Social Psychology, 40, 471-499

Baker, N. D., and Grant Ludwig, L. (2018). Disaster preparedness as social control. Critical Policy Studies, 12(1), 24-43.

Doveym, 2013. Informal settlement and sustainable urban development case study: Metropolis on Mashhad in North eastern Iran. Journal of World applied science

Edobot, E. N. (2015). Slum Fire Fighting Strategies for Sustainable Development: a Case Study of Kibera, Nairobi County, Kenya. United States International University- Africa Nairobi, Kenya.

Etinay, N., Egbu, C., and Murray, V. (2018). Building urban resilience for disaster risk management and disaster risk reduction. Procedia engineering, 212, 575-582.

Fisher, A.A.1998) Handbook for Family Planning Operations Research Design. Population Council, New York.

Flick, U. (2015). Introducing research methodology: A beginner's guide to doing a research project.

Koitamet (2013) Challenges of dealing with fire outbreaks in informal settlements: the case of the 12th September 2011 Sinai fire in Nairobi.

Lam, R. P. K., Leung, L. P., Balsari, S., Hsiao, K. H., Newnham, E., Patrick, K., ... and Leaning, J. (2017). Urban disaster preparedness of Hong Kong residents: A territory-wide survey. International journal of disaster risk reduction, 23, 62-69.

Levac, J., Toal-Sullivan, D., and OSullivan, T. L. (2012). Household emergency preparedness: a literature review. Journal of community health, 37(3), 725-733.

Menya, A. A., and K’Akumu, O. A. (2016). Inter-agency collaboration for fire disaster management in Nairobi City. Journal of Urban Management, 5(1), 32-38.

Munasinghe, N. L., and Matsui, K. (2019). Examining disaster preparedness at Matara district general hospital in Sri Lanka. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 40, 101154.

Murage, J. G. (2012). Factors influencing fire disaster preparedness in the central business district of Nyeri Town, Nyeri County | Research Kenya. University of Nairobi, Kenya. Retrieved from http://www.researchkenya.or.ke/thesis/27362/factors-influencing-fire-disaster-preparedness-in-the-central-business-district-of-nyeri-town,-nyeri-county

Paton, D. (2019). Disaster risk reduction: Psychological perspectives on preparedness. Australian journal of psychology, 71(4), 327-341.

Qureshi, A. M., Butt, M., and Khan, O. M. (2006). The Role of GIS and Public Awareness for Disaster Management. In 2006 International Conference on Advances in Space Technologies (pp. 37–42). https://doi.org/10.1109/ICAST.2006.313794

Ronan, K. R., Alisic, E., Towers, B., Johnson, V. A., and Johnston, D. M. (2015). Disaster preparedness for children and families: a critical review. Current psychiatry reports, 17(7), 58.

Tall, A., Patt, A. G., and Fritz, S. (2013). Reducing vulnerability to hydro-meteorological extremes in Africa. A qualitative assessment of national climate disaster management policies: Accounting for heterogeneity. Weather and Climate Extremes, 1, 4-16.

UN Habitat, (2013) "On World Cities Day UN-Habitat Releases 2013 Report on The Value of Sustainable Urbanization".

Wekesa, B. W., Steyn, G. S., and Otieno, F. F. (2011). A review of physical and socio-economic characteristics and intervention approaches of informal settlements. Habitat international, 35(2), 238-245.

Downloads

Published

2022-10-07

How to Cite

Muriuki , Z. K. ., Kei , R. K. ., & Muchiri, J. M. (2022). Level of Awareness on Disaster Risk Preparedness in Informal Settlements of Nyeri Town, Nyeri County, Kenya. International Journal of Health Sciences, 5(3), 41–63. https://doi.org/10.47941/ijhs.1053

Issue

Section

Articles