OMB Control No: |
0970-0531 |
Expiration Date: |
09/30/2025 |
Interview
Protocol –
Researchers
Tailor the following interview guide by (1) skipping sections or questions not relevant for the respondent (e.g., federal program staff do not need the PRA Statement); or (2) modifying questions to reflect their role, their professional perspective/knowledge, or information obtained before the interview. Use the follow-up questions or probes (dashed items below the numbered questions) as needed to obtain additional information or clarification. If you are running out of time, prioritize the most important questions.
You should be familiar with the respondent’s role and office, so you should select and/or tailor questions, as relevant, to probe for the respondent’s insight into the key research questions.
Before you begin the interview, read the script to describe the purpose to respondents, answer any questions they have about the session, and ask for their consent to record the interview.
The purpose of this learning session is to identify areas of improvement and support for the state, tribal, local, and territorial (STLT) human services jurisdictional entities—the major stakeholder in the provision of human services to disaster survivors. This learning will also be used to create OHSEPR’s STLT Capabilities Guide.
This engagement activity will support the identification of challenges in disaster response for STLT human services programs and activities that may help to improve future human services disaster preparedness and response. Further, this activity will assist OHSEPR to fill knowledge gaps related to the capabilities for states, tribes, local entities, and territories to support human services needs following disasters and emergencies.
The contractor will conduct one interview with researchers for 90 minutes each. These sessions will be held using an online platform. Interview sessions will include two to three people. Participants will engage in the session through the chat box. In addition, meeting facilitators will encourage candid discussion re: disaster preparedness and response experiences using discussion questions (outlined below). All responses will be anonymous and will not be attributable to a specific individual. Categorical responses will be aggregated.
We are with Lindahl Reed, OHSEPR’s contractor, and we will conduct this interview.
“OHSEPR seeks to learn about state, tribal, local, and territorial human services entities’ response to previous emergencies and any issues with service provision during or following a disaster. The purpose of this effort is to develop a capabilities guide to help STLT human services program staff quickly plan, prioritize, and act, in future emergency responses. The disasters we are focusing on include the COVID-19 pandemic and other recent disasters such as the 2020 wildfire season on the West Coast, hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria in 2017, the Flint water crisis in 2014 and Hurricane Sandy in 2012.”
We will focus on the following areas:
Roles and experience;
Issues and challenges;
Support for STLT;
Coordination;
Disaster equity; and
Capabilities.
“OHSEPR is collecting this information to identify areas of improvement and support for disaster human services planning and operations. This discussion will last approximately an hour. Your participation is voluntary. All information will be kept private. A Federal agency may not conduct or sponsor, and no individual or entity is required to respond to, nor shall an individual or entity be subject to a penalty for failure to comply with a collection of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, unless that collection of information displays a currently valid OMB Control Number. The OMB # is 0970-0531 and the expiration date is 9/30/2025.”
If we do not call your name, please enter your name and contact information into the chat. To begin, we want to learn about your research and experience in working with states, tribes, local and territorial human services programs on emergency preparedness and response.
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We would like to hear about STLT issues, challenges, and gaps in human services preparedness and response, based on research and your experience. Preparedness efforts occur before the disaster and may include emergency planning, coordination with emergency management officials. Response efforts refers to providing services during or after the disaster including immediately or several months after the disaster.
What are the greatest issues/challenges/gaps for STLT human services organizations and providers, for example, those related to providing services or administering programs:
When preparing for a disaster?
i. PROBE: This may include (e.g., coordination with stakeholders and emergency management officials, emergency operations plans, etc.)
During or following a disaster? (e.g., increased demand for services, serving a population with acute needs, etc.)
PROBE: Do the issues/challenges/gaps change over time (e.g., 6 months after, 18 months after, etc.)? If so, how?
How have STLT human services organizations providers addressed these issues/challenges/gaps?
PROBE: Did it work well? Why or why not?
Now we’ll spend some time discussing support to STLT human services programs and providers for emergency preparedness and response.
What kinds of support and resources do STLT human services organizations and providers most need to address these issues, challenges, and gaps?
What support from government or other partners would be helpful to STLT human service programs/providers to prepare for a disaster? What has been helpful in preparedness?
PROBE: This may include guidance, training, technical assistance, tools, etc.
What support from government or other partners would be helpful to STLT human service programs/providers to respond during or following a disaster? What has been helpful for response efforts?
PROBE: This may include supplemental funding, guidance, protocols, technical assistance, tools, etc.
How have human service program waivers and flexibilities helped STLT human services programs provide services following a disaster?
PROBE: What are some examples?
Now we’ll discuss coordinating with stakeholders.
Which stakeholders should STLT human services organizations and providers communicate and/or coordinate with during a disaster response or to prepare for a future disaster response?
How can coordination with stakeholders help address gaps such as funding, staffing, outreach, etc.?
Which stakeholders would be helpful for STLT human service providers in addressing disruptions human services delivery?
Disruptions may include blocked roads, disrupted public transit, closed schools or childcare, and lack of access to internet and phone services.
We would like to discuss how to address equity during disaster response. OHSEPR worked across HHS last year to define disaster equity. Disaster equity is the provision of community-specific services and resources for disaster survivors that are accessible, and culturally and linguistically tailored to mitigate disparities in health and well-being and support resilience.
What does an equitable approach to disaster response look like? What factors are important for STLTT human services programs to consider?
Any examples of approaches that have work well?
(If they answer no) Are you familiar with any frameworks or research about disaster equity?
To what extent do you believe there is room for STLT human service programs to improve in the equity-related areas of emergency response?
If so, what improvements would you like to see and what would support those improvements?
3. What approaches might STLT human service programs use to assess/measure equity in disaster response?
OHSEPR has developed draft capabilities for STLT human services organizations and we’d like to get your feedback.
Coalition Building: Forming a coalition of human services agencies and organizations that meet regularly to collaborate and coordinate on preparing for, responding to, and recovering from incidents impacting human services to ensure that disaster survivors receive the most appropriate assistance
Planning: documenting authorities and roles and responsibilities; developing an all-hazards emergency operations plan for the equitable, timely, and efficient delivery of post-disaster human services
Social Vulnerability: knowing who may need assistance before, during, and after the disaster
Disaster Equity: providing community-specific services and resources for disaster survivors that are accessible, and culturally and linguistically tailored to mitigate disparities in health and well-being and support resilience
Coordination: working together with stakeholders to provide equitable, timely and efficient delivery of human services following a disaster; and to address service delivery issues
Communication: strong, consistent, and effective communication mechanisms between different stakeholders for a well-coordinated disaster response
Information sharing: facilitating the exchange and/or dissemination of accurate, relevant, actionable, and timely information about the disaster and the status and needs of the human services delivery system
Surge: assisting a surge of individuals with human services needs during incidents that exceed the limits of the normal human services infrastructure of an affected jurisdiction
Evaluation and Learning: practices to assess and improve capabilities for disaster human services
Do any, all, or none of these capabilities resonate with you? If some or all of them resonate with you, how do they resonate with you?
PROBE: Which ones are the most critical?
PROBE: Which ones would you remove?
PROBE: What is missing that you would find helpful?
OPTIONAL QUESTION for poll/chat: How would you rank these capabilities?
Is there anything else you’d like to share with us?
Thank you for your time and input!
A few next steps:
You will receive an email from us with our contact information. Feel free to contact us if you think of anything else.
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT OF 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13) STATEMENT OF PUBLIC BURDEN: The purpose of this information collection is to identify areas of improvement and support for disaster human services preparedness and response efforts. Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 90 minutes per respondent, including the time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and reviewing the collection of information. This is a voluntary collection of information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB # is 0970-0531 and the expiration date is 9/30/2025. If you have any comments on this collection of information, please contact Bridget Miller at Bridget.Miller@acf.hhs.gov.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Patel, Mili (ACF) |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2024-10-07 |