Meltzer Gabriella Y, Merdjanoff Alexis A, Gershon Robyn R, Fothergill Alice, Peek Lori, Abramson David M
Departments of Epidemiology and Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 722 W. 168th Street, Room 1616, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, New York University School of Global Public Health, 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003, USA.
J Child Fam Stud. 2024 Jun;33(6):1995-2011. doi: 10.1007/s10826-024-02815-0. Epub 2024 Mar 6.
Limited research has examined the ramifications of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (DHOS) on children and their families. This study builds on secondary data analysis and representative survey findings from the multi-method, multi-phase Gulf Coast Population Impact (GCPI) project. Specifically, this phase of the GCPI research draws on in-depth, semi-structured interview and focus group data to illuminate the social conditions that influenced poor child health outcomes in the aftermath of the DHOS and amid other disasters. These qualitative data were collected two years after the spill with caregivers, teachers, faith- and community-based leaders in five highly impacted Gulf Coast communities. Exploratory qualitative analysis revealed that children were affected by the DHOS and other related challenges through exposure to familial stress emerging from livelihood disruptions. Such disruptions were the result of ongoing poverty, damage to the fishing industry, and exposure to cumulative and compounding environmental disasters. In cases of severe familial stress, children may have experienced toxic stress because of caregivers' displaced distress; ambiguous loss through caregivers' physical and/or emotional absence; and the children's recognition of their families' dire financial situations. Toxic stress was most often expressed through acute and chronic physiological, emotional, and behavioral health challenges. This study expands current understandings of the impact of technological disasters and cumulative environmental disasters on children and families. It underscores the importance of investing in harm prevention strategies to reduce threats to the health and wellbeing of young people living in ecologically and socioeconomically insecure environments prone to intensifying technological and climate-fueled disasters.
仅有有限的研究考察了深水地平线石油泄漏事件(DHOS)对儿童及其家庭的影响。本研究基于多方法、多阶段的墨西哥湾沿岸人口影响(GCPI)项目的二次数据分析和代表性调查结果。具体而言,GCPI研究的这一阶段利用深入的半结构化访谈和焦点小组数据,以阐明在DHOS事件之后以及其他灾难期间影响儿童健康状况不佳的社会状况。这些定性数据是在泄漏事件发生两年后,与墨西哥湾沿岸五个受影响严重社区的照顾者、教师、宗教和社区领袖收集的。探索性定性分析表明,儿童因生计中断导致的家庭压力而受到DHOS及其他相关挑战的影响。这种中断是持续贫困、渔业受损以及遭受累积和复合性环境灾难的结果。在严重的家庭压力情况下,儿童可能因照顾者的替代性痛苦而经历毒性压力;因照顾者身体和/或情感上的缺席而经历模糊的丧失;以及儿童对家庭严峻经济状况的认知。毒性压力最常通过急性和慢性生理、情感和行为健康挑战表现出来。本研究扩展了当前对技术灾难和累积环境灾难对儿童和家庭影响的理解。它强调了投资于伤害预防策略的重要性,以减少对生活在生态和社会经济不安全环境中、易受技术和气候引发的灾难加剧影响的年轻人的健康和福祉的威胁。