Who Is Best Prepared for a Disaster?

January 16, 2008

Men and women are on different pages when it comes to disaster preparedness, with males typically believing they are more prepared than women, according to a national survey by AxcessPoints, a California-based online disaster preparedness service that helps consumers safeguard insurance, financial and medical information.

The survey, taken by AxcessPoints in late October, found significant gender differences between the sexes, including the following:

• More than 36% of males said they are extremely or well prepared for a disaster, compared to just 22% for women. At the same time, 62% of men surveyed said they are either not very well prepared or not prepared at all, compared to 77% of women asked the same question.

• Asked whether their families have an emergency communications plan, 38% of males reporting having one, as compared to 22% of women.

• Men and women have different priorities in responding to a disaster. When asked what item they would grab from their homes in case of an emergency, 39% of males said they would take financial documents necessary to help rebuilding after a disaster, while only 27% of women said so. Family or wedding pictures fared best with the women, with 32% saying they would save those items first, as compared to only 14% of the men.

“Men and women have significantly different viewpoints about disaster preparedness and those divergent attitudes expose American individuals and families to unnecessary additional risk,” said AxcessPoints CEO Karlyn Carnahan. “The common thread between both men and women is that they lack knowledge and have not spent the time to adequately prepare. By taking a few simple steps, consumers can significantly minimize the financial and personal pain from a disaster.”

For the insurance and financial services industries, the lack of preparation represents an opportunity to help consumers. The survey indicated that both men and women would rely on their insurance company more heavily than established relief organizations, such as the Red Cross or FEMA.

“Consumers have a higher level of trust with insurance companies than other organizations designed to provide disaster assistance,” Carnahan said. “That translates into a unique opportunity to offer a disaster preparedness solution to consumers across the country.”

Source: www.axcesspoints.com

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Latest Comments

  • January 23, 2008 at 2:03 am
    Reason says:
    I've had to evacuate twice in the past few years due to the wild fires. You get good at it after a couple practice runs. Keep your important docs in a small portable fire safe... read more
  • January 18, 2008 at 9:18 am
    PLS says:
    First of all, To address the Different priorities: Men-financials Women pics both can be saved to a disk or zip drive for reproduction or reference later. They would then be c... read more
  • January 17, 2008 at 3:16 am
    A woman says:
    It also depends on your perception of "disaster". I, a woman, have the wind-up radio from RadioShack, a photo-copy of my passport, a flashlight and a bottle of water in the cl... read more

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