(Press-News.org)
WORLD’S LARGEST STUDY REVEALS THE LONG-TERM HEALTH IMPACTS OF FLOODING
The world’s largest and most comprehensive study of the long-term health impacts of flooding – via analysis of over 300 million hospitalizations records in eight countries prone to flooding events – has found an increased risk of 26 per cent of all diseases serious enough to require hospitalization. This impact on the health of communities lasts up to seven months post event.
The study, led by Monash University researchers, and published in the journal, Nature Water, found that flooding events – which are increasing globally due to climate change – led to increases in hospitalization for cardiovascular diseases (35%), respiratory diseases (30%), infectious diseases (26%), digestive diseases (30%) such as gastroenteritis, mental health disorders (11%), diabetes (61%), cancer (34%), nervous system disorders (34%), and renal diseases (40%).
Led by Professors Yuming Guo and Professor Shanshan Li, the study covered the period from 2010 to 2019, looking at 747 communities from eight countries/territories that had experienced major flood events in that period, including the northeast region of New South Wales in Australia, along the Amazon River and the southern region of Brazil, within the Mekong Basin in Vietnam, and in the south region of Thailand.
An estimated 23 per cent of the global population is exposed to inundation due to serious flooding equivalent to a 1 in 100-year event. According to Professor Guo, there will be “an escalation in the severity, duration and frequency of floods due to the more frequent extreme precipitation events and rising sea levels due to global warming.”
While the health impacts of flooding, such as drowning, electrocution, and hypothermia, are expected, this is the first and most comprehensive study to look at broader impacts on health, “suggesting that the health impact of floods may have been underestimated and will further exacerbate as climate changes,” Professor Guo said.
The countries involved in the study were Australia, Vietnam, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Thailand, New Zealand and Taiwan.
HOW FLOODS HAVE A LONG-TERM IMPACT ON HEALTH
Flood events impact health through the contamination of water supply system, which can elevate the risk of digestive diseases and aid the spread of infectious diseases. Additionally, floods can create environments that are conducive to the growth of fungi, bacteria, viruses, and vectors like mice and insects which can trigger outbreaks of respiratory, digestive, and infectious diseases. Floods may also force massive evacuations, causing displacement. Even when temporary shelters are provided, short in sanitation facilities often result in hygiene issues, raising the likelihood of respiratory, digestive, and infectious diseases. Access and capacity to healthcare services may be impaired after floods, leading to delay in regular medical interventions, which include dialysis for renal diseases, chemotherapy and radiotherapy for cancer, and medication regimens for cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases, infectious diseases, digestive diseases, mental disorders, diabetes, nervous system disorders, and renal diseases. And long-term psychological stress (e.g., from property damage and financial losses) can worsen or induce adverse health outcomes by compromising the immune system, disrupting sleep, leading to substance abuse, and diminishing self-care.
END
World’s largest study reveals the long-term health impacts of flooding
Analysis of over 300 million hospitalizations records in eight countries finds a boost of 26% of all diseases requiring hospitalization
2025-04-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A surprise contender for cooling computers: lasers
2025-04-08
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Sandia National Laboratories is helping a tech company test a bright new idea for cooling computers.
Minnesota-based startup Maxwell Labs has entered into a cooperative research and development agreement with Sandia and the University of New Mexico to demonstrate laser-based photonic cooling for computer chips. The company is pioneering the new technology to regulate the temperature of chips, significantly lower the power consumption and increase the efficiency of conventional air and water-based systems.
“About 30 to 40 percent of the energy data centers use is spent on cooling,” said Raktim Sarma, the ...
USPSTF recommendation statement on primary care behavioral counseling interventions to support breastfeeding
2025-04-08
Bottom Line: The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends providing interventions or referrals, during pregnancy and after birth, to support breastfeeding. The association between breastfeeding and health benefits in children has been previously well established; health benefits have also been found for women who breastfeed. However, breastfeeding rates in the U.S. are relatively modest; as of 2021, 59.8% of infants at age 6 months are breastfed and 27.2% of infants at that age are exclusively breastfed. The USPSTF routinely makes recommendations about the ...
William N. Hait, MD, Ph.D., FAACR, honored with the 2025 AACR-Margaret Foti Award for Leadership and Extraordinary Achievements in Cancer Research
2025-04-08
CHICAGO – The 2025 AACR-Margaret Foti Award for Leadership and Extraordinary Achievements in Cancer Research will be presented to William N. Hait, MD, PhD, Fellow of the AACR Academy, during the AACR Annual Meeting 2025, to be held April 25-30 at the McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago, Illinois.
Hait served as the global head of Janssen Research and Development and was the executive vice president, chief of external innovation, and medical safety and global public health officer at Johnson & Johnson prior to his retirement in 2024. He is being recognized with this award for his extensive ...
Dinosaurs’ apparent decline prior to asteroid may be due to poor fossil record
2025-04-08
The idea that dinosaurs were already in decline before an asteroid wiped most of them out 66 million years ago may be explained by a worsening fossil record from that time rather than a genuine dwindling of dinosaur species, suggests a new study led by UCL researchers.
The study, published in Current Biology, analysed the fossil record of North America in the 18 million years up to the asteroid impact at the end of the Cretaceous period (between 66 and 84 million years ago).
Taken at face value, these fossils - more than 8,000 of them - suggest the number of dinosaur species peaked about 75 million years ago and then declined in the nine million years leading up to the ...
Coffee too weak? Try this!
2025-04-08
WASHINGTON, April 8, 2025 – Tens of billions of kilograms of coffee are consumed around the world each year. However, due to its very specific agricultural needs, coffee can be difficult to cultivate, and ongoing climate change threatens its growth.
To efficiently meet the high demand for coffee grounds, researchers from the University of Pennsylvania worked to optimize their use in pour-over coffee. They presented their suggestions in Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing.
“What we recommend is making the pour height as high as possible, while still maintaining a laminar ...
Health care practitioner bias and access to inpatient rehabilitation services among survivors of violence
2025-04-08
About The Study: In this mixed-methods qualitative study of hospital patients discharged to rehabilitation centers, significant disparities in denials for admission were observed among survivors of violence, who were disproportionally Black or Hispanic. Stigmatizing language found in medical records suggested that bias within the referral process may have contributed to these disparities. These findings underscore the need for reformed clinical documentation practices and enhanced oversight of ...
Mediterranean diet, physical activity, and bone health in older adults
2025-04-08
About The Study: In the PREDIMED-Plus trial, an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet and physical activity lifestyle intervention mitigated weight loss– and age-related bone mineral density decline among older women with metabolic syndrome compared with conventional ad libitum Mediterranean diet recommendations. Weight-loss lifestyle interventions with longer follow-up are warranted in the future to confirm these results in relation to bone health.
Corresponding author: To contact the corresponding authors, email Jesús F. García-Gavilán, Ph.D. (jesusfrancisco.garcia@urv.cat), and Jordi Salas-Salvadó, ...
PCORI commits to new patient-centered CER to empower health care decisions
2025-04-08
April 8, 2025
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Every day, millions of Americans make health care decisions without enough information to fully understand the trade-offs between approaches to care and make informed choices for themselves or their families. To help address these information gaps, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) has announced funding for new patient-centered comparative clinical effectiveness research (CER) studies across a range of conditions. These studies will help provide patients and caregivers with the evidence needed to make more informed health and health care decisions and more effectively manage their health.
Research ...
Researchers watch a single catalytic grain do work in real time
2025-04-08
PULLMAN, Wash. – A new way to watch catalytic reactions happen at the molecular level in real time could lead to better fundamental understanding and planning of the important reactions used in countless manufacturing processes every day.
A team of researchers from Washington State University and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) used a new probing technique to look at the surface of iron as it was exposed to oxygen to find out what makes one catalyst work better than another. The work is reported in the journal, Angewandte Chemie. It could eventually help engineers tune reactions better and develop new catalysts ...
AI that measures its own uncertainty could improve liver cancer detection
2025-04-08
“These advancements, by providing more reliable and efficient diagnostic tools, may significantly impact clinical practice by addressing the ever-growing clinical demand and work pressure, while maintaining interpretability and clinical relevance.”
BUFFALO, NY – April 8, 2025 – A new editorial was published in Oncotarget, Volume 16, on April 4, 2025, titled “Deep learning-based uncertainty quantification for quality assurance in hepatobiliary imaging-based techniques.”
Dr. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
AI detects first imaging biomarker of chronic stress
Shape of your behind may signal diabetes
Scientists identify five ages of the human brain over a lifetime
Scientists warn mountain climate change is accelerating faster than predicted, putting billions of people at risk
The ocean is undergoing unprecedented, deep-reaching compound change
Autistic adults have an increased risk of suicidal behaviours, irrespective of trauma
Hospital bug jumps from lungs to gut, raising sepsis risk
Novel discovery reveals how brain protein OTULIN controls tau expression and could transform Alzheimer's treatment
How social risk and “happiness inequality” shape well-being across nations
Uncovering hidden losses in solar cells: A new analysis method reveals the nature of defects
Unveiling an anomalous electronic state opens a pathway to room-temperature superconductivity
Urban natives: Plants evolve to live in cities
Folklore sheds light on ancient Indian savannas
AI quake tools forecast aftershock risk in seconds, study shows
Prevalence of dysfunctional breathing in the Japanese community and the involvement of tobacco use status: The JASTIS study 2024
Genetic study links impulsive decision making to a wide range of health and psychiatric risks
Clinical trial using focused ultrasound with chemotherapy finds potential survival benefit for brain cancer patients
World-first platform for transparent, fair and equitable use of AI in healthcare
New guideline standardizes outpatient care for adults recovering from traumatic brain injury
Physician shortage in rural areas of the US worsened since 2017
Clinicians’ lack of adoption knowledge interferes with adoptees’ patient-clinician relationship
Tip sheet and summaries Annals of Family Medicine November/December 2025
General practitioners say trust in patients deepens over time
Older adults who see the same primary care physician have fewer preventable hospitalizations
Young European family doctors show moderate readiness for artificial intelligence but knowledge gaps limit AI use
New report presents recommendations to strengthen primary care for Latino patients with chronic conditions
Study finds nationwide decline in rural family physicians
New public dataset maps Medicare home health use
Innovative strategy trains bilingual clinic staff as dual-role medical interpreters to bridge language gaps in primary care
Higher glycemic index linked to higher lung cancer risk
[Press-News.org] World’s largest study reveals the long-term health impacts of floodingAnalysis of over 300 million hospitalizations records in eight countries finds a boost of 26% of all diseases requiring hospitalization







