PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Three decades of data in Bangladesh show elevated risk of infant mortality In flood-prone areas

The findings reveal the long term public health burden of environmental hazards that are predicted to worsen under climate change

2023-12-05
(Press-News.org) A new study from researchers at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography and UC San Francisco estimates 152,753 excess infant deaths were attributable to living in flood-prone areas in Bangladesh over the past 30 years. Additionally, across the study period, children born during rainy months faced higher risk of death than those born in dry months. 

The paper was published Dec. 5 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

The findings begin to unspool the long term public health impacts of recurring environmental hazards such as flooding, wildfires, or extreme heat, many of which are becoming more common or more severe under climate change, said study co-author Tarik Benmarhnia, an associate professor at Scripps Oceanography who studies climate change and health.

Benmarhnia and his co-authors were motivated to undertake the study as a way to move beyond cataloging the acute public health impacts of natural hazards linked to climate change. 

“We wanted to document what happens when year after year some communities are exposed to these climate hazards,” said Benmarhnia. 

Benmarhnia and his co-authors wanted to find a way to look at the long term public health burden of living in flood prone-areas on child mortality and Bangladesh seemed to offer an opportunity to quantify that burden over a long time period.

“Child mortality is a proxy for easily avoidable negative health outcomes,” said Benmarhnia. “If we can’t avoid child mortality there are also likely to be issues with malnutrition, mental health, and communicable diseases – from a public health perspective infant mortality is only the tip of the iceberg.” 

Bangladesh sits in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna river basin, which also runs through Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, and northern India and is home to more than 618 million people. Every year, monsoon season brings extensive flooding to Bangladesh, and those floods are predicted to become more frequent and extreme due to climate change.

To look at the long term health implications of repeated exposure to flooding, the study combined a well-established spatially-resolved flood-zone mapping tool and health data from 58,945 mothers and 150,081 births collected by U.S. AID’s Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) program between 1988 and 2017. The study matched mothers that were nearly identical across other measurable characteristics that might impact infant mortality, such as wealth and education, and differed only in the flood-risk of their birthing location.

“We wanted to isolate as much as possible the effect of living in flood-prone areas from other factors that could alter the risk of child mortality,” said Benmarhnia. 

The study estimated that living in flood prone areas was associated with an excess risk in infant mortality of 5.3 additional deaths per 1,000 births compared to living in non-flood prone areas over the 30-year period between 1988 and 2017, with children born during rainy months at higher risk of death than those born in dry months. 

The researchers then used national population data, weighted statistical analysis, and the same flood-zone mapping tools to extrapolate their findings with this initial group to the entire country of Bangladesh. This national-scale analysis estimated that 152,753 excess infant deaths were attributable to living in flood-prone areas in Bangladesh over the past 30 years.

The study’s results don’t point to any particular mechanism for how flood exposure might drive increased infant mortality, and Benmarhnia said investigating potential causes will be a necessary step in developing effective interventions. That said, he suggested that flooding can impact food security and financial stability, especially for agricultural communities.

Benmarhnia said the findings suggest that focusing only on the immediate effects of flooding may underestimate their impact on population health, and that effects on infant mortality in particular appear to manifest over a longer time scale. The study also provides a template for measuring longer-term health impacts from floods and a generalizable example of how to study the long-term health effects of climate-related environmental hazards. 

The role of climate change was not explicitly included in the analysis, said Benmarhnia, but he said there was a continuous increase in the overall risk of infant mortality across the study’s three decades. 

“We didn’t quantify the role of climate change, but it’s the elephant in the room,” said Benmarhnia. “While our data can’t explicitly link our findings to climate change, they’re compatible with the notion that climate change is making flooding and the public health impacts that flow from it worse.”

In light of their findings, the study authors are now studying the potential of seasonally-timed nutritional interventions that can bolster food security when communities are at the greatest risk from flooding and other climate-sensitive exposures. 

“We need to be thinking about and dealing with the long term consequences of other climate hazards and instances of so-called extreme weather,” said Benmarhnia. “We may also need to redefine our concept of extreme. The intensity is extreme but these environmental hazards like flooding are less and less rare. We may need to reframe these issues as recurring problems, and not just emergency situations.”

In addition to Benmarhnia, the study was co-authored by Francois Rerolle, who is a postdoctoral researcher at UC San Francisco and Scripps Oceanography, and Benjamin Arnold of UC San Francisco.


 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mice pass the mirror test, a classic indicator of self-recognition

Mice pass the mirror test, a classic indicator of self-recognition
2023-12-05
Researchers report December 5 in the journal Neuron that mice display behavior that resembles self-recognition when they see themselves in the mirror. When the researchers marked the foreheads of black-furred mice with a spot of white ink, the mice spent more time grooming their heads in front of the mirror—presumably to try and wash away the ink spot. However, the mice only showed this self-recognition-like behavior if they were already accustomed to mirrors, if they had socialized with other mice who looked like them, and if the ink spot was relatively large. The team identified a subset of neurons in the hippocampus that are involved in developing and storing this visual self-image, ...

Tonsil, adenoid removal improved sleep quality, some behavioral problems in children with mild sleep apnea

2023-12-05
The surgery did not improve the children’s neurodevelopmental functioning but was associated with improved quality of life, sleep symptoms, and blood pressure 12-months post-surgery according to a randomized control trial led by researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute Between 6% and 17% of children suffer from sleep-disordered breathing, characterized by habitual snoring, increased respiratory effort, and sleep apnea. If left untreated, the disorder may put children at higher risk of neurodevelopmental impairment, reduced quality of life, and cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. Enlarged tonsils are one of the main risk ...

Harvesting water from air with solar power

Harvesting water from air with solar power
2023-12-05
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5, 2023 – More than 2.2 billion people currently live in water-stressed countries, and the United Nations estimates that 3.5 million die every year from water-related diseases. Because the areas most in need of improved drinking water are also located in some of the sunniest places in the world, there is strong interest in harnessing sunlight to help obtain clean water. Researchers from Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China developed a promising new solar-powered atmospheric water harvesting technology that could help provide enough drinking water for people ...

Pregnancy weight gain after gastric bypass or sleeve gastrectomy

2023-12-05
About The Study: Women with a history of bariatric surgery had lower pregnancy weight gain than matched controls with similar early pregnancy characteristics in this study of 12,000 pregnancies. Pregnancy weight gain was lower in those with a shorter surgery-to-conception interval or lower surgery-to-conception weight loss, but did not differ by surgical procedure.  Authors: Huiling Xu, M.D., M.Sc., of the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, is the corresponding author.  To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.46228) Editor’s Note: Please see the ...

Objective sleep duration and all-cause mortality among people with obstructive sleep apnea

2023-12-05
About The Study: In this study of 2,574 participants with obstructive sleep apnea, compared with participants with objective sleep duration of at least seven hours, those sleeping less than seven hours had higher risks of all-cause mortality independent of apnea-hypopnea index. Further studies would be needed to investigate health benefits of extending sleep length among people with obstructive sleep apnea with short sleep duration.  Authors: Shichao Wei, M.D., of Fujian Medical University in Fuzhou, China, is the corresponding author.  To access ...

Surgery beneficial for some children with mild sleep-disordered breathing

2023-12-05
Surgery beneficial for some children with mild sleep-disordered breathing NIH-supported study shows better sleep, blood pressure after adenotonsillectomy   Surgical removal of the tonsils and adenoids in children with snoring and mild breathing problems during sleep appears to improve their sleep, quality of life, and blood pressure a year after surgery, a clinical trial supported by the National Institutes of Health has found. The study, funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), part of NIH, is believed to be the first large, randomized trial to address the effects of adenotonsillectomy on children with mild sleep-disordered ...

Unlocking neutron star rotation anomalies: Insights from quantum simulation

Unlocking neutron star rotation anomalies: Insights from quantum simulation
2023-12-05
Neutron stars have fascinated and puzzled scientists since the first detected signature in 1967. Known for their periodic flashes of light and rapid rotation, neutron stars are among the densest objects in the universe, with a mass comparable to that of the Sun but compressed into a sphere only about 20 kilometers in diameter. These stellar objects exhibit a peculiar behavior known as a “glitch”, where the star suddenly speeds up its spin. This phenomenon suggests that neutron stars might be partly superfluid. In a superfluid, rotation is characterized by numerous tiny vortices, each carrying ...

Z-scheme heterojunction g-C3N5/Bi5O7I high-efficiency mercury removal photocatalyst

Z-scheme heterojunction g-C3N5/Bi5O7I high-efficiency mercury removal photocatalyst
2023-12-05
They published their work on October. 23 in Energy Material Advances.    "It is imperative to develop energy-saving, safe and sustainable photocatalytic mercury removal technology," said paper author Wu Jiang, professor with College of Energy and Mechanical Engineering of Shanghai University of Electric Power. "Currently, thermocatalytic technologies account for most of the market, but they are constrained in terms of manufacturing costs and sustainability."   Wu ...

Medicare is overpaying for generic drugs

2023-12-05
Medicare is the single largest provider of health insurance in the United States, serving 63.8 million senior citizens as of 2022. Three-quarters of these recipients are enrolled in optional Medicare Part D plans, which provide outpatient prescription drug coverage to seniors through private insurance companies. In 2022, Medicare paid more than $160 Billion for prescription drugs, making it the single largest payer of pharmaceuticals in the US. While Medicare is meant to keep healthcare affordable for seniors, millions of Americans still face steep costs ...

Forecasting forest health using models to predict tree canopy height

2023-12-05
Tree height is an important indicator of a forest’s maturity and overall health. Forest restoration projects rely on tree height as a predictor and measurement of success, but forecasting a forest’s future tree height based on observations alone is almost impossible. There are too many factors that contribute to the growth and health of trees. Because so many factors can impact how a tree develops, researchers enhanced a predictive model called the Allometric Scaling and Resource Limitations (ASRL) model and then deployed it using ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists unlock secrets behind flowering of the king of fruits

Texas A&M researchers illuminate the mysteries of icy ocean worlds

Prosthetic material could help reduce infections from intravenous catheters

Can the heart heal itself? New study says it can

Microscopic discovery in cancer cells could have a big impact

Rice researchers take ‘significant leap forward’ with quantum simulation of molecular electron transfer

Breakthrough new material brings affordable, sustainable future within grasp

How everyday activities inside your home can generate energy

Inequality weakens local governance and public satisfaction, study finds

Uncovering key molecular factors behind malaria’s deadliest strain

UC Davis researchers help decode the cause of aggressive breast cancer in women of color

Researchers discovered replication hubs for human norovirus

SNU researchers develop the world’s most sensitive flexible strain sensor

Tiny, wireless antennas use light to monitor cellular communication

Neutrality has played a pivotal, but under-examined, role in international relations, new research shows

Study reveals right whales live 130 years — or more

Researchers reveal how human eyelashes promote water drainage

Pollinators most vulnerable to rising global temperatures are flies, study shows

DFG to fund eight new research units

Modern AI systems have achieved Turing's vision, but not exactly how he hoped

Quantum walk computing unlocks new potential in quantum science and technology

Construction materials and household items are a part of a long-term carbon sink called the “technosphere”

First demonstration of quantum teleportation over busy Internet cables

Disparities and gaps in breast cancer screening for women ages 40 to 49

US tobacco 21 policies and potential mortality reductions by state

AI-driven approach reveals hidden hazards of chemical mixtures in rivers

Older age linked to increased complications after breast reconstruction

ESA and NASA satellites deliver first joint picture of Greenland Ice Sheet melting

Early detection model for pancreatic necrosis improves patient outcomes

Poor vascular health accelerates brain ageing

[Press-News.org] Three decades of data in Bangladesh show elevated risk of infant mortality In flood-prone areas
The findings reveal the long term public health burden of environmental hazards that are predicted to worsen under climate change