Sandifer Paul A, Knapp Landon C, Collier Tracy K, Jones Amanda L, Juster Robert-Paul, Kelble Christopher R, Kwok Richard K, Miglarese John V, Palinkas Lawrence A, Porter Dwayne E, Scott Geoffrey I, Smith Lisa M, Sullivan William C, Sutton-Grier Ariana E
School of Sciences & Mathematics, College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A.
Master's in Environmental Studies, College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.A.
Geohealth. 2017 Mar;1(1):17-36. doi: 10.1002/2016GH000038. Epub 2017 Mar 6.
Few conceptual frameworks attempt to connect disaster-associated environmental injuries to impacts on ecosystem services (the benefits humans derive from nature) and thence to both psychological and physiological human health effects. To our knowledge, this study is one of the first, if not the first, to develop a detailed conceptual model of how degraded ecosystem services affect cumulative stress impacts on the health of individual humans and communities. Our comprehensive Disaster-Pressure State-Ecosystem Services-Response-Health (DPSERH) model demonstrates that oil spills, hurricanes, and other disasters can change key ecosystem components resulting in reductions in individual and multiple ecosystem services that support people's livelihoods, health, and way of life. Further, the model elucidates how damage to ecosystem services produces acute, chronic, and cumulative stress in humans which increases risk of adverse psychological and physiological health outcomes. While developed and initially applied within the context of the Gulf of Mexico, it should work equally well in other geographies and for many disasters that cause impairment of ecosystem services. Use of this new tool will improve planning for responses to future disasters and help society more fully account for the costs and benefits of potential management responses. The model also can be used to help direct investments in improving response capabilities of the public health community, biomedical researchers, and environmental scientists. Finally, the model illustrates why the broad range of potential human health effects of disasters should receive equal attention to that accorded environmental damages in assessing restoration and recovery costs and time frames.
很少有概念框架试图将与灾难相关的环境损害与对生态系统服务(人类从自然中获得的益处)的影响联系起来,进而与人类的心理和生理健康影响联系起来。据我们所知,本研究即便不是首个,也是首批详细构建退化的生态系统服务如何影响个体人类和社区健康的累积压力影响概念模型的研究之一。我们全面的灾害-压力-状态-生态系统服务-响应-健康(DPSERH)模型表明,石油泄漏、飓风和其他灾害会改变关键的生态系统组成部分,导致支持人们生计、健康和生活方式的个体和多种生态系统服务减少。此外,该模型阐明了生态系统服务的损害如何在人类中产生急性、慢性和累积性压力,从而增加不良心理和生理健康结果的风险。虽然该模型是在墨西哥湾的背景下开发并首次应用的,但它在其他地区以及许多导致生态系统服务受损的灾害中同样适用。使用这一新工具将改善对未来灾害应对的规划,并帮助社会更全面地考虑潜在管理应对措施的成本和收益。该模型还可用于指导对提高公共卫生界、生物医学研究人员和环境科学家应对能力的投资。最后,该模型说明了在评估恢复和恢复成本及时间框架时,为何灾害对人类健康的广泛潜在影响应得到与环境损害同等的关注。