COPEWELL: A Conceptual Framework and System Dynamics Model for Predicting Community Functioning and Resilience After Disasters

Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2018 Feb;12(1):127-137. doi: 10.1017/dmp.2017.39. Epub 2017 Jun 21.

Abstract

Objective: Policy-makers and practitioners have a need to assess community resilience in disasters. Prior efforts conflated resilience with community functioning, combined resistance and recovery (the components of resilience), and relied on a static model for what is inherently a dynamic process. We sought to develop linked conceptual and computational models of community functioning and resilience after a disaster.

Methods: We developed a system dynamics computational model that predicts community functioning after a disaster. The computational model outputted the time course of community functioning before, during, and after a disaster, which was used to calculate resistance, recovery, and resilience for all US counties.

Results: The conceptual model explicitly separated resilience from community functioning and identified all key components for each, which were translated into a system dynamics computational model with connections and feedbacks. The components were represented by publicly available measures at the county level. Baseline community functioning, resistance, recovery, and resilience evidenced a range of values and geographic clustering, consistent with hypotheses based on the disaster literature.

Conclusions: The work is transparent, motivates ongoing refinements, and identifies areas for improved measurements. After validation, such a model can be used to identify effective investments to enhance community resilience. (Disaster Med Public Health Preparedness. 2018;12:127-137).

Keywords: community functioning; resilience; system dynamics.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological*
  • Disaster Planning / methods*
  • Disaster Planning / trends
  • Disaster Victims / psychology*
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Residence Characteristics / classification*
  • Systems Analysis