Collaborating Centre for Oxford University and CUHK for Disaster and Medical Humanitarian Response (CCOUC), Division of Global Health and Humanitarian Medicine, The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, Division of Global Health and Humanitarian Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Br Med Bull. 2019 Mar 1;129(1):91-105. doi: 10.1093/bmb/ldz002.
Disaster epidemiological studies indicate that Asia has the highest frequency of natural disasters. Rural communities are heavily impacted by natural disasters and have different healthcare needs to urban ones. Referencing Asian countries, this paper's objective is to provide an overview of health impacts and the current evidence for designing programmes and policies related to rural health emergency and disaster risk management (health-EDRM).
This paper uses published English-only reports and papers retrieved from PubMed, Google Scholar, Embase, Medline and PsycINFO on rural disaster and emergency responses and relief, health impact and disease patterns in Asia (January 2000-January 2018).
Earthquakes are the most studied natural disasters in rural communities. The medical burden and health needs of rural communities were most commonly reported among populations of extreme age. Most of the existing research evidence for rural interventions was reported in China. There lacks published peer-reviewed reports of programme impacts on personal and community preparedness.
There is a lack of evidence-based health-EDRM interventions to evaluate implementation effectiveness in rural areas despite vast volumes of health-related disaster literature.
Climate change-related disasters are increasing in frequency and severity. Evidence is needed for disaster risk reduction interventions to address the health risks specific to rural populations.
To support global policy development, urgent evidence is needed on the intervention effectiveness, long-term health outcomes, local and cultural relevance as well as sustainability of health relief produced by Health-EDRM programmes in rural areas.
灾害流行病学研究表明,亚洲发生自然灾害的频率最高。农村社区深受自然灾害的影响,其医疗保健需求与城市社区不同。本文以亚洲国家为例,旨在概述农村卫生应急和灾害风险管理(卫生-EDRM)相关的健康影响和现有证据。
本文使用了仅发表英文的报告和从 PubMed、Google Scholar、Embase、Medline 和 PsycINFO 检索到的关于亚洲农村灾害和应急响应、卫生影响和疾病模式的论文(2000 年 1 月至 2018 年 1 月)。
地震是农村社区研究最多的自然灾害。农村社区的医疗负担和健康需求在极端年龄人群中最常被报道。大多数关于农村干预的现有研究证据都来自中国。缺乏关于农村干预对个人和社区准备情况的方案影响的已发表同行评议报告。
尽管有大量与健康相关的灾害文献,但仍缺乏农村地区基于证据的卫生-EDRM 干预措施来评估实施效果。
与气候变化相关的灾害发生频率和严重程度正在增加。需要有证据表明,减少灾害风险的干预措施能够应对农村人口特有的健康风险。
为支持全球政策制定,迫切需要有关农村地区卫生-EDRM 方案的干预效果、长期健康结果、地方和文化相关性以及可持续性的证据。