Edwards Ben, Gray Matthew, Borja Judith
Australian National University, Australia.
Office of Population Studies Foundation, Inc., University of San Carlos, Australia.
SSM Popul Health. 2021 May 24;15:100825. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100825. eCollection 2021 Sep.
Climate change is leading to an increased number of natural disasters. Children from low- and middle-income countries are disproportionately affected. The impacts of exposure to multiple natural disasters on the development of children are not well understood. The Philippines had 6.5 million people affected by natural disasters in 2018 and is therefore an ideal country in which to study the cumulative effects of natural disasters on human development.
We used wave 1 (2016-17) of the Longitudinal Cohort Study on the Filipino Child, a nationally representative cohort study of 4952 10-year-old children, to examine the impact of natural disasters. For caregivers, we examined mental health, family violence, and food insecurity. For children, we examined exposure to violence and stunting. We used random effects models to estimate the associations between natural disasters and children's development outcomes and caregivers' outcomes, after adjusting for neighbourhood, demographic, and geographic variables. Disaster exposure was measured using caregiver-reported measures of cumulative exposure and cumulative impact of disasters, average neighbourhood reports and data linked from the International Disaster Database (EM-DAT), an independent measure of community exposure to disaster.
We found that experiencing natural disasters, as measured by neighbourhood reports, was associated with higher levels of family violence in the previous 12 months, parenting stress, children witnessing physical violence, physical abuse of children, stunting in children, and greater food insecurity. Associations with individual self-reported exposure showed was similar. Associations with natural disasters measured using EM-DAT data showed a similar pattern: exposure to greater numbers of natural disasters was associated with higher levels of family violence, physical abuse of children, stunting in children, and food insecurity. Impacts of disasters was associated with higher levels of family violence, depression and food insecurity.
This is the first national study to document that cumulative measures of natural disasters had small, but wide-ranging, impacts on children and their caregivers. Further research is needed to identify factors that will protect populations who are at risk of high levels of natural disasters to ensure the optimal development of children.
The Philippines Project, The Australian National University.
气候变化导致自然灾害数量增加。低收入和中等收入国家的儿童受到的影响尤为严重。人们对儿童遭受多重自然灾害对其发育的影响了解不足。2018年,菲律宾有650万人受到自然灾害影响,因此是研究自然灾害对人类发展的累积影响的理想国家。
我们利用菲律宾儿童纵向队列研究的第一波数据(2016 - 17年),这是一项对4952名10岁儿童进行的具有全国代表性的队列研究,以考察自然灾害的影响。对于照顾者,我们考察了心理健康、家庭暴力和粮食不安全状况。对于儿童,我们考察了暴力暴露和发育迟缓情况。在对邻里、人口统计学和地理变量进行调整后,我们使用随机效应模型来估计自然灾害与儿童发育结果以及照顾者结果之间的关联。灾害暴露通过照顾者报告的灾害累积暴露和累积影响指标、邻里平均报告以及来自国际灾害数据库(EM - DAT)的数据链接来衡量,后者是社区灾害暴露的独立指标。
我们发现,根据邻里报告衡量,经历自然灾害与过去12个月内更高水平的家庭暴力、育儿压力、儿童目睹身体暴力、儿童遭受身体虐待、儿童发育迟缓以及更大程度的粮食不安全相关。与个人自我报告的暴露情况的关联显示出类似结果。使用EM - DAT数据衡量的与自然灾害的关联呈现出类似模式:遭受更多自然灾害与更高水平的家庭暴力、儿童遭受身体虐待、儿童发育迟缓和粮食不安全相关。灾害影响与更高水平的家庭暴力、抑郁和粮食不安全相关。
这是第一项全国性研究,记录了自然灾害的累积指标对儿童及其照顾者产生了虽小但范围广泛的影响。需要进一步研究以确定能够保护面临高自然灾害风险人群的因素,以确保儿童的最佳发育。
澳大利亚国立大学菲律宾项目