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Creators/Authors contains: "Seelam, Rachana"

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  1. The Study of Trauma, Resilience, and Opportunity among Neighborhoods in the Gulf III, hereafter referred to as STRONG III, is a survey conducted among a randomly selected, representative sample of adult residents of 56 counties located in the coastal areas along the Gulf of Mexico, spanning 5 states (Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida). This is a re-contact study of STRONG I and STRONG II, the data for which are archived on GRIIDC, a Gulf Science Data Repository. The original STRONG I sample comprised 2,520 respondents, where as the re-contact efforts in STRONG III yielded responses from 599 participants in the Gulf region. The survey evaluates a broad range of topics including living conditions, neighborhood satisfaction and safety, social cohesion, neighborhood walkability, home environment, COVID-19 experiences and risks, COVID-19 disruptions to routine behaviors, COVID-19 service impacts, COVID-19 employment impacts, social resources, storm experiences, physical health, alcohol consumption, mental health, healthcare access, trauma, food security, political efficacy, and sociodemographics. mail questionnaire; telephone interview; web-based survey; 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Understanding public media channel preferences can inform preparedness plans, response strategies, and long-term recovery. However, questions remain about how media consumption changes across pre-crisis, crisis, and post-crisis phases. Past theories argue that media use may change for several reasons, including during times of societal conflict and challenge. These theories point to the belief that, during a crisis, we expect media channel use to change because media preferences during a crisis will be fundamentally different compared to everyday routines. This paper takes advantage of a survey fielded to Texas residents soon after Hurricane Harvey. Here we ask: (1) What media channels are most prominent in each crisis phase? and (2) Do media channel preferences change across crisis phases? We use simple descriptive statistics and chi-squares tests to describe media channel preferences across the three crisis phases by demographics. Additionally, we use alluvial diagrams to visualize media channel preferences over time. In total, 62% (n=174) of respondents reported no changes in channel preferences. However, chi-square tests identified significant differences in media use changes related to a handful of demographic characteristics. These findings are explored alongside theories that would hypothesize likely media use changes across pre-crisis, crisis, and post-crisis phases. 
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