
Public health emergencies do not affect all communities equally. While disasters may be indiscriminate in their arrival, their impacts are profoundly shaped by social, economic, and structural conditions that exist long before an emergency occurs.
Preparedness is a health equity issue because access to information, resources, healthcare, transportation, and safe housing determines who can prepare, and who cannot.
Communities facing poverty, language barriers, chronic illness, disability, or systemic marginalization often experience:
- Delayed warnings
- Limited evacuation options
- Disrupted continuity of care
- Greater morbidity and mortality
Preparedness strategies that ignore these realities reinforce inequity rather than reduce it.
Equitable preparedness requires intentional design: planning with communities, not for them. It means recognizing that resilience is built through inclusion, trust, and sustained investment—not last-minute outreach during crisis.
Preparedness without equity is incomplete preparedness.