(Press-News.org) With New York declared a state of emergency following flash flooding, there is increasing concern such events will become more common globally.
Now a study led by Monash University scientists in Australia has found that people impacted by a flooding event are at significantly increased risk of dying – including heart and lung problems – in a crucial window between three and six weeks after the event, even after the flooding has dissipated.
The study, published today in the BMJ, found that the risk of dying increased and persisted for up to 60 days (50 days for cardiovascular mortality) after a flooded day - increasing by for 2.1% for all-cause deaths, 2.6% for cardiovascular deaths, and 4.9% for respiratory deaths.
Flood events make up almost half (43%) of all natural disasters, and they are projected to increase in severity, duration, and frequency in the background of climate change. Twenty-three percent of people are directly exposed to inundation depths of over 0.15 meters every decade.
The study, led by Professors Shanshan Li and Yuming Guo from Monash University School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine in collaboration with London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, provides the first timeline of the health impacts of flooding giving local health authorities and policy makers a blueprint as to when they should actively monitor flood-affected communities.
The researchers studied 761 communities from 34 countries that had experienced at least one flood event during the decade from 2000-2019, reviewing a total of 47.6 million all-cause deaths including 11.1 million cardiovascular deaths, and 4.9 million respiratory deaths in the study time period.
According to Professor Guo, these flood-mortality associations varied with local climate type and were stronger in populations with low socioeconomic status or high proportions of older population. “We know now that to the question: Do mortality risks change after floods in the general population? The answer is yes, and this needs to be factored into policy responses to flooding events,” he said.
The researchers studied daily counts of deaths during 2000-2019 in 761 communities from 34 countries that has experienced at least one flooding event during 2000-2019 and the proportions of deaths attributable to floods were calculated.
According to Monash University’s Professor Li, a co-lead author on the paper, “our study suggests that all-causes, cardiovascular, and respiratory mortality risks reach a peak at around 25 days and last for up to 60 days after exposure to floods,” she said.
In the aftermath of a flood, deaths from natural causes may be triggered by contamination of food and water, exposure to pathogens (i.e., fungi, bacteria, and virus), impaired access to health services, and psychological impairment.
According to Professor Guo, healthcare providers should be aware of the increased health risks following floods, particularly in vulnerable communities and when there are persistent floods, since the health impacts will cumulate. “They should incorporate this
knowledge into their practice and be prepared for the suddenly elevated demands of health services to reduce avoidable deaths from natural causes,” he said.
“Public health institutions should monitor the changes in mortality rate in the 25 days following floods to enable prompt interventions. Policymakers should prioritize
comprehensive disaster preparedness, early warning/detecting systems, and efficient disaster response protocols to reduce the attributable deaths due to floods – including climate change adaptation measures because of projected increases in floods globally.”
END
How floods kill, long after the water has gone – global decade-long study
People impacted by floods at significantly increased risk of dying between three and six weeks after the event, study reveals
2023-10-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
USC joins LA-area stem cell institutes in forming a regenerative medicine consortium
2023-10-03
USC is partnering with seven of Los Angeles’ leading regenerative medicine institutes to form the Los Angeles and surrounding area regenerative medicine consortium (LA-RMC), with the goal of fulfilling the promise of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM): to develop laboratory discoveries into treatments for patients with unmet medical needs.
CIRM, the voter-created agency that provides public funding for stem cell research in California, is dedicated to advancing regenerative medicine, which uses stem cells and related approaches to treat disease and disorders. Regenerative ...
When cells go boom: study reveals inflammation-causing gene carried by millions
2023-10-03
Australian researchers at WEHI have found that a genetic change that increases the risk of inflammation, through a process described as ‘explosive’ cell death, is carried by up to 3% of the global population.
The study may explain why some people have an increased chance of developing conditions like inflammatory bowel disease or suffer more severe reactions to infections with bacteria like Salmonella.
At a glance
MLKL is a gene essential to triggering necroptotic cell death – a natural process that protects our body from infection. In some people this process can go awry and ...
Study from Fukushima shows even low doses of radiation may contribute to diabetes
2023-10-03
New research to be presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Hamburg (2-6 Oct), suggests that exposure to low doses of radiation may contribute to an increased risk of diabetes.
The study by Dr Huan Hu and Dr Toshiteru Ohkubo from the Japanese National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health involved more than 6,000 out of around 20,000 emergency workers who responded to the radiation accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, which was hit by a huge tsunami in March 2011.
Substantial amounts of radioactive materials were released into the environment following explosions at the ...
Worldwide audit finds testosterone replacement improves blood sugar control in men with type 2 diabetes
2023-10-03
Real-world data from an ongoing international audit of testosterone deficiency in men with type 2 diabetes, being presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Hamburg (2-6 Oct), suggests that testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) improves glycaemic control for up to 2 years.
The early data from 37 centres across 8 countries who have so far joined the Association of British Clinical Diabetologists (ABCD) audit [1], suggest that the reason that HbA1c (a measure of average blood sugar levels over the past 2-3 months) continues ...
Semaglutide significantly improves blood sugar control and weight loss in adults with type 2 diabetes for up to 3 years in real-world study
2023-10-03
New research presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Hamburg (2-6 Oct), shows that treatment with the drug semaglutide significantly improves blood sugar control and weight loss in adults with type 2 diabetes for up to three years.
“Our long-term analysis of semaglutide in a large and diverse cohort of patients with type 2 diabetes found a clinically relevant improvement in blood sugar control and weight loss after 6 months of treatment, comparable with that seen in randomised trials”, says Professor Avraham Karasik from the Institute of Research and Innovation at Maccabi Health Services ...
Drinking dark tea every day may help control blood sugar to reduce diabetes risk
2023-10-03
Drinking dark tea every day may help to mitigate type 2 diabetes risk and progression in adults through better blood sugar control, suggests new research at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Hamburg (2-6 Oct).
The study, by researchers from the University of Adelaide in Australia and Southeast University in China, found that compared with never tea drinkers, daily consumers of dark tea had 53% lower risk for prediabetes and 47% reduced risk for type 2 diabetes, even after taking into account established risk factors known to drive the risk for diabetes, including age, ...
UC Riverside startup company wins prestigious NIH grant
2023-10-02
Soon after he joined UC Riverside in 2015, Maurizio Pellecchia, a professor of biomedical sciences in the UCR School of Medicine, began working with the UCR Research and Economic Development office to create on campus an incubator space. He envisioned that space as a home for UCR scientists to create startup companies to prove the commercial potential of their technologies. That multi-year effort helped create in the Multidisciplinary Research Building the EPIC Life Sciences Incubator that currently houses young companies in agricultural technology, biomedical technologies, bioengineering, and medicinal chemistry.
One of the tenant companies in the incubator ...
DNA from discarded whale bones suggests loss of genetic diversity due to commercial whaling
2023-10-02
Commercial whaling in the 20th century decimated populations of large whales but also appears to have had a lasting impact on the genetic diversity of today’s surviving whales, new research from Oregon State University shows.
Researchers compared DNA from a collection of whale bones found on beaches near abandoned whaling stations on South Georgia Island in the south Atlantic Ocean to DNA from whales in the present-day population and found strong evidence of loss of maternal DNA lineages among blue and humpback whales.
“A maternal lineage is often associated with an animal’s cultural memories such as feeding and breeding locations that are passed from one generation ...
Viruses dynamic and changing after dry soils are watered
2023-10-02
Viruses in soil may not be as destructive to bacteria as once thought and could instead act like lawnmowers, culling older cells and giving space for new growth, according to research out of the University of California, Davis, published Sept. 28 in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution.
How viruses affect ecosystems, including bacteria, is challenging to untangle because they are complex and change over time and space. But the first annual rain on Mediterranean ecosystems, such as those in California, offers a kind of reset, triggering activity that can be observed.
Scientists ...
ACC Quality Summit explores practical strategies to reboot and rebrand health care quality
2023-10-02
The 2023 American College of Cardiology (ACC) Quality Summit kicks off on October 11-13 in Orlando, Florida, putting the spotlight on the value of ACC Accreditation and NCDR services to enhance health care quality. Cardiovascular clinicians and stakeholders across the U.S. will converge at this year’s Summit to discuss the role of accreditation and registries in health equity initiatives, best practices for rebooting and rebranding health care quality, and strategies to engage the CV team in the quality process.
“ACC’s ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
We must develop thinkers, not crammers and fact experts
Political polar opposites may be more alike than they think
GI tumor microbes may predict prognosis and inform treatment
Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments
How plants rot: New method decodes hidden decomposers of wood and leaves
COPD care pathway leads to shorter hospital stays, more referrals to pulmonary rehab
First global guidelines for pregnancy and inflammatory bowel disease developed
In search of the perfect raspberry
Bio-inspired, self-cleaning sweat sensors for comfortable wearable health monitoring
Chung-Ang University researchers reveal strange dynamics of nanoparticle growth and shrink
No strong evidence for alternative autism treatments, study finds
New self-assembling material could be the key to recyclable EV batteries
An ancient signpost: Minute fossils tell big story about arthropod evolution
Predictable structures in music synchronises blood pressure the most, and could be used to create personalized music-based cardiovascular therapies
New systematic review and meta-analysis shows an association between shingles vaccination and lower risk of heart attack and stroke
Food for thought: Using food delivery services to provide rapid cardiac arrest response and potentially save lives
College drinking linked to poor academics, mental health for those around the drinker: Study
Nearly 80% of whale sharks in this marine tourism hotspot have human-caused scars
Spider uses trapped fireflies as glowing bait to attract more prey
How AI can build bridges between nations, if diplomats use it wisely
80% of Americans don’t know early-stage prostate cancer often has no symptoms
Researchers engineer ureter tissue from stem cells, paving way for transplantable kidneys
Strong, evidence-based leadership at CDC essential in wake of director’s exit, says SHEA
Birdwatching tourism is booming. Some countries are benefiting, while others are left behind
High protein or Trp diet increases the risk of cancer-associated venous thromboembolism
Risk of a second cancer after early breast cancer is low
Genetic key to why immune responses differ between men and women
Discovery could lead to new treatments for life-threatening allergic reactions
CRF announces TCT 2025 late-breaking clinical trials and science
Ancient DNA reveals farming spread through migration, locals slow to adopt it
[Press-News.org] How floods kill, long after the water has gone – global decade-long studyPeople impacted by floods at significantly increased risk of dying between three and six weeks after the event, study reveals