Ho Jessica Y, Frankenberg Elizabeth, Sumantri Cecep, Thomas Duncan
Popul Dev Rev. 2017 Sep;43(3):467-490. doi: 10.1111/padr.12075. Epub 2017 Jun 28.
Exposure to extreme events has been hypothesized to affect subsequent mortality because of mortality selection and scarring effects of the event itself. We examine survival at and in the five years after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami for a population-representative sample of residents of Aceh, Indonesia who were differentially exposed to the disaster. For this population, the dynamics of selection and scarring are a complex function of the degree of tsunami impact in the community, the nature of individual exposures, age at exposure, and gender. Among individuals from tsunami-affected communities we find evidence for positive mortality selection among older individuals, with stronger effects for males than for females, and that this selection dominates any scarring impact of stressful exposures that elevate mortality. Among individuals from other communities, where mortality selection does not play a role, there is evidence of scarring with property loss associated with elevated mortality risks in the five years after the disaster among adults age 50 or older at the time of the disaster.
由于事件本身的死亡率选择和疤痕效应,接触极端事件被认为会影响随后的死亡率。我们调查了2004年印度洋地震和海啸发生时及之后五年里,印度尼西亚亚齐省具有人口代表性的居民样本的生存情况,这些居民受到灾害的影响程度各不相同。对于这一人群,选择和疤痕形成的动态是社区海啸影响程度、个体接触性质、接触时的年龄以及性别的复杂函数。在受海啸影响社区的个体中,我们发现老年个体存在正向死亡率选择的证据,男性的影响比女性更强,并且这种选择主导了任何会增加死亡率的压力性接触的疤痕影响。在其他社区的个体中,死亡率选择不起作用,有证据表明,在灾难发生时年龄在50岁及以上的成年人中,与财产损失相关的疤痕在灾难发生后的五年里与死亡率风险升高有关。