Department of Geography, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Priestley International Centre for Climate, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2019 May 2;14(5):e0214116. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0214116. eCollection 2019.
Acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) is a global public health priority that often disproportionately effects Indigenous populations. While previous research examines the association between meteorological conditions and AGI, little is known about how socio-cultural factors may modify this relationship. This present study seeks to address this research gap by comparing AGI prevalence and determinants between an Indigenous and non-Indigenous population in Uganda. We estimate the 14-day self-reported prevalence of AGI among adults in an Indigenous Batwa population and their non-Indigenous neighbours using cross-sectional panel data collected over four periods spanning typically rainy and dry seasons (January 2013 to April 2014). The independent associations between Indigenous status, precipitation, and AGI are examined with multivariable multi-level logistic regression models, controlling for relative wealth status and clustering at the community level. Estimated prevalence of AGI among the Indigenous Batwa was greater than among the non-Indigenous Bakiga. Our models indicate that both Indigenous identity and decreased levels of precipitation in the weeks preceding the survey period were significantly associated with increased AGI, after adjusting for confounders. Multivariable models stratified by Indigenous identity suggest that Indigenous identity may not modify the association between precipitation and AGI in this context. Our results suggest that short-term changes in precipitation affect both Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations similarly, though from different baseline AGI prevalences, maintaining rather than exacerbating this socially patterned health disparity. In the context of climate change, these results may challenge the assumption that changing weather patterns will necessarily exacerbate existing socially patterned health disparities.
急性胃肠道疾病(AGI)是全球公共卫生的重点关注领域,通常会对原住民人口造成不成比例的影响。尽管之前的研究考察了气象条件与 AGI 之间的关联,但对于社会文化因素如何改变这种关系知之甚少。本研究旨在通过比较乌干达的原住民巴特瓦人和非原住民之间的 AGI 患病率和决定因素来填补这一研究空白。我们使用跨四个时期(2013 年 1 月至 2014 年 4 月)收集的横截面面板数据,估计了原住民巴特瓦人和他们的非原住民邻居中成年人在 14 天内自我报告的 AGI 患病率。使用多变量多层逻辑回归模型,控制相对财富状况和社区层面的聚类,来检验原住民身份、降水和 AGI 之间的独立关联。在调整了混杂因素后,我们的模型表明,原住民身份和调查前几周降水减少与 AGI 增加显著相关。根据原住民身份分层的多变量模型表明,在这种情况下,原住民身份可能不会改变降水和 AGI 之间的关联。我们的研究结果表明,短期降水变化对原住民和非原住民人口的影响相似,尽管他们的基线 AGI 患病率不同,这维持了而不是加剧了这种社会模式的健康差异。在气候变化的背景下,这些结果可能会挑战这样一种假设,即气候变化模式的改变必然会加剧现有的社会模式健康差异。