Department of Health Systems and Population Health Sciences, University of Houston College of Medicine, 4849 Calhoun Road, Bldg 2, Houston, TX 77204, USA.
Humana Integrated Health System Sciences Institute, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Dec 21;19(1):35. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19010035.
Although evidence suggests that successive climate disasters are on the rise, few studies have documented the disproportionate impacts on communities of color. Through the unique lens of successive disaster events (Hurricane Harvey and Winter Storm Uri) coupled with the COVID-19 pandemic, we assessed disaster exposure in minority communities in Harris County, Texas. A mixed methods approach employing qualitative and quantitative designs was used to examine the relationships between successive disasters (and the role of climate change), population geography, race, and health disparities-related outcomes. This study identified four communities in the greater Houston area with predominantly non-Hispanic African American residents. We used data chronicling the local community and environment to build base maps and conducted spatial analyses using Geographic Information System (GIS) mapping. We complemented these data with focus groups to assess participants' experiences in disaster planning and recovery, as well as community resilience. Thematic analysis was used to identify key patterns. Across all four communities, we observed significant Hurricane Harvey flooding and significantly greater exposure to 10 of the 11 COVID-19 risk factors examined, compared to the rest of the county. Spatial analyses reveal higher disease burden, greater social vulnerability, and significantly higher community-level risk factors for both pandemics and disaster events in the four communities, compared to all other communities in Harris County. Two themes emerged from thematic data analysis: (1) Prior disaster exposure prepared minority populations in Harris County to better handle subsequent disaster suggesting enhanced disaster resilience, and (2) social connectedness was key to disaster resiliency. Long-standing disparities make people of color at greater risk for social vulnerability. Addressing climate change offers the potential to alleviate these health disparities.
尽管有证据表明连续发生的气候灾害呈上升趋势,但很少有研究记录到这些灾害对有色人种社区的不成比例影响。通过连续灾害事件(飓风哈维和冬季风暴乌里)与 COVID-19 大流行相结合的独特视角,我们评估了德克萨斯州哈里斯县少数族裔社区的灾害暴露情况。采用定性和定量设计的混合方法来研究连续灾害(以及气候变化的作用)、人口地理、种族和与健康差距相关的结果之间的关系。本研究确定了休斯顿大都市区内四个以非西班牙裔非裔美国人为主的社区。我们使用记录当地社区和环境的数据来构建基础地图,并使用地理信息系统 (GIS) 映射进行空间分析。我们用焦点小组来评估参与者在灾难规划和恢复以及社区弹性方面的经验,以此来补充这些数据。主题分析用于确定关键模式。在所有四个社区中,我们观察到飓风哈维造成了严重的洪水灾害,与该县其他地区相比,有 11 个 COVID-19 风险因素中有 10 个风险因素显著增加。空间分析显示,与哈里斯县的所有其他社区相比,四个社区的疾病负担更高,社会脆弱性更大,两个大流行和灾害事件的社区一级风险因素显著更高。主题数据分析得出两个主题:(1) 先前的灾害暴露使哈里斯县的少数族裔更好地应对后续灾害,表明其灾难恢复能力增强,(2) 社会联系是灾难恢复能力的关键。长期存在的差异使有色人种面临更大的社会脆弱性风险。应对气候变化有可能缓解这些健康差距。