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

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

2025-09-03
(Press-News.org) Although the material damage from 2012's Hurricane Sandy may have been repaired, the storm left a lasting impact on cardiovascular health, according to new findings from Weill Cornell Medicine and New York University researchers.

The study, published Sept. 3 in JAMA Network Open, found that older adults living in flood-hit areas in New Jersey faced a 5% higher risk of heart disease for up to five years after Sandy’s landfall. This is one of the first studies to rigorously quantify long-term cardiovascular risks associated with flooding in older adults. Most studies focus on the immediate consequences of severe weather events.

"Climate-amplified hurricanes and hurricane-related floods are expected to increase into the future," said Dr. Arnab Ghosh, assistant professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and an internist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, who led the research. “So, it’s essential to understand the long-term health effects on those most vulnerable."

Natural Controlled Experiment The researchers analyzed Medicare data from over 120,000 people aged 65 and older living in New Jersey, New York City, and Connecticut in the five years after the storm.

They compared ZIP code areas that were flooded during the hurricane to nearby ZIP code areas that weren’t, matching the communities in terms of age, income, race and health status before the storm. Using advanced statistical models, the team tracked heart-related health events like heart attacks, strokes and heart failure in people who did not relocate after the hurricane.

“Capitalizing on such a large, diverse and stable patient population as Medicare recipients, allowed our team to see broader population trends while controlling for many of the threats to validity, whether socio-economic factors or the prevalence of co-morbidities,” said senior author Dr. David Abramson, clinical professor of social and behavioral sciences in the School of Global Public Health at New York University. The researchers concluded that heart failure rates were higher in flooded areas, especially in New Jersey, and that the risk persisted for four to five years—not just weeks or months—after the storm.

They hypothesize that more people in New Jersey were directly affected by the storm’s physical and emotional stressors. Flooded zip codes in New Jersey had lower median incomes and higher area deprivation index scores, which are indicators of social and economic disadvantage. These factors are linked to worse health outcomes and lower access to care, especially after a disaster. The residents also faced lingering difficult environmental and psychological circumstances and reduced community support.

In a related study published last month in Frontiers in Public Health, Dr. Ghosh and his colleagues found that the rate of death in elderly individuals living in areas flooded after Sandy was 9% higher on average five years later compared to those in less affected neighborhoods. The magnitude of this effect varied by region. While New York City saw an 8% increase in mortality, Connecticut had a 19% increase. However, the rest of coastal New York, including Long Island, and New Jersey seemed to escape this effect.

“The regional differences that we noted may highlight how local environments differ and need further examination,” Dr. Ghosh said. “New York City, for example, is heavily urbanized, while impacted parts of Connecticut and New Jersey are suburban with different infrastructure and more single-family homes.”

Taking a Longer-Term View The study suggests that disaster preparedness and recovery frameworks should integrate chronic disease management and long-term health monitoring, not just short-term emergency care. The findings are particularly relevant for climate resilience planning, especially in regions with aging populations and increasing hurricane exposure.

“We are starting to appreciate that disasters are happening more frequently. But our policies and support systems for vulnerable groups after severe weather has struck haven't been well developed,” Dr. Ghosh said.

Given the regional variation in health outcomes, localized health system preparedness is essential, added the researchers. This includes resource allocation, training and infrastructure to manage chronic disease burdens in the aftermath of disasters.

“With this work, we lay the groundwork to show that hurricanes can have long-term impacts on health,” said Dr. Ghosh. Building on these results, the researchers are now planning to conduct larger-scale analyses on the health consequences of other events such as wildfires and tornadoes. Another aspect they plan to study involves how increased health risks related to weather affect Medicare, Medicaid and the health care system financially.

This work was supported with funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Center for Advancing Clinical Translational Science, both part of the National Institutes of Health, through grant numbers  R03TR004976 and K08HL163329.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

2025-09-03
Researchers at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) have uncovered a promising new therapeutic target for Barth syndrome, a rare genetic condition with no current cure.  Barth syndrome is an X-linked genetic condition affecting about 500 people worldwide, most of whom are males. The rare condition causes muscle weakness, frequent infections and cardiomyopathy. While heart transplants can manage cardiac symptoms, many children with Barth syndrome do not live past early childhood.  The research, published in Nature, was an international effort involving academic and industry collaborations, and revealed ...

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

2025-09-03
A research team led by Nanjing University has introduced a transparent, colorless, and unidirectional solar concentrator that can be directly coated onto standard window glass. Utilizing cholesteric liquid crystal (CLC) multilayers with submicron lateral periodicities, this diffractive-type solar concentrator (CUSC) selectively guides sunlight toward the edge of the window where photovoltaic cells are installed. The study appears in PhotoniX. Unlike conventional luminescent or scattering-based concentrators, which often suffer ...

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

2025-09-03
SAN ANTONIO — September 3, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has completed a mission study detailing how a proposed spacecraft could fly by an interstellar comet, providing remarkable insights into the properties of bodies originating beyond our solar system. The internally funded SwRI project developed the mission design, scientific objectives, payload and key requirements based on previous interstellar object (ISO) detections. Using the recent discovery of 3I/ATLAS, the team validated the mission ...

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

2025-09-03
Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery in living patients does not increase the risk of adverse events or cognitive decline compared to standard DBS procedures that don’t involve biopsies, a team of clinical research scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has demonstrated. The study findings, published online September 3 in Neurosurgery, the official publication of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, establish the safety of an approach that allows researchers to collect valuable living human brain tissue during planned neurosurgical procedures, ...

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

2025-09-03
DALLAS, September 3, 2025 — Atrial fibrillation, or AFib, often goes unrecognized despite affecting millions and increasing stroke risk by up to 5 times[1]. New consumer patient research from the American Heart Association, conducted by The Olinger Group, finds that most people with AFib (62%) had no prior knowledge of the condition before being diagnosed[2]. During September, AFib Awareness Month, the American Heart Association, a relentless force changing the future of health for everyone everywhere, is raising awareness nationwide about the condition, and that early identification and treatment of AFib are critical to stroke prevention. Anyone can develop ...

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

2025-09-03
DALLAS, Sep. 3, 2025 — Only 1 in 4 children in the U.S. gets the recommended amount of daily physical activity, and about 1 in 3 is overweight or obese[1]. To help address these growing health concerns[2], the American Heart Association, a relentless force changing the future of health for everyone everywhere, has awarded wellness grants to 69 schools across the country to support healthier learning environments. Through its Kids Heart Challenge™ and American Heart Challenge™ initiatives, the Association awards annual financial grants that provide schools with resources to meet their health and wellness needs — from the purchase of physical education ...

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

2025-09-03
About The Study: Application of the Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial (TARGET) guideline recommendations aims to improve reporting transparency and peer review and help researchers, clinicians, and other readers interpret and apply the results. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, James H. McAuley, PhD, email james.mcauley@unsw.edu.au. Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2025.13350?guestAccessKey=6ad54c92-efdb-4815-8df4-2ed119c048a7&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=090325 #  ...

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

2025-09-03
About The Study: Findings from this systematic review indicated that nonregistration, premature discontinuation due to poor recruitment, and nonpublication of randomized clinical trial (RCT) results remained major challenges, especially for non–industry-sponsored trials. To mitigate these challenges, requirements enforced by funders and ethics committees also taking into account legal obligations should be considered and empirically evaluated. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Matthias Briel, MD, PhD, email matthias.briel@usb.ch. Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This ...

Improving the reporting on health equity in observational research (STROBE-Equity)

2025-09-03
About The Study: Use of the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) -Equity extension alongside the STROBE statement when writing up completed reports of observational studies has the potential to advance the reporting of health equity data and considerations. Improved reporting of this information may help knowledge users better identify and apply evidence relevant to populations experiencing inequities. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Omar Dewidar, ...

Bacteria that ‘shine a light’ on microplastic pollution

2025-09-03
Microplastics are tiny, plastic fragments — many too small to see — found in the air, soil and water. Measuring their abundance in nature can direct cleanup resources, but current detection methods are slow, expensive or highly technical. Now, researchers publishing in ACS Sensors have developed a living sensor that attaches to plastic and produces green fluorescence. In an initial test on real-world water samples, the biosensor could easily detect environmentally relevant levels of microplastics. Currently, scientists detect ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Delta-8 THC use highest where marijuana is illegal, study finds

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

Improving the reporting on health equity in observational research (STROBE-Equity)

Bacteria that ‘shine a light’ on microplastic pollution

SeoulTech develop hybrid polymer-CNT electrodes for safer brain-machine interfaces

From symptoms to biology: Neurodegeneration in paraventricular thalamus in bipolar disorder

From longevity to cancer: Understanding the dual nature of polyamines

Faraday Institution commits a further £9M to battery research to deliver commercial impact

Study: Evaluating chatbot accuracy in the fast-changing blood cancer field

A ‘wasteful’ plant process makes a key prenatal vitamin. Climate change may reduce it.

Targeted cell removal offers treatment hope

Here we glow: New organic liquid provides efficient phosphorescence

[Press-News.org] Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly