Epidemics after Natural Disasters
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Abstract
The relationship between natural disasters and communicable diseases is frequently misconstrued. The risk for outbreaks is often presumed to be very high in the chaos that follows natural disasters, a fear likely derived from a perceived association between dead bodies and epidemics. However, the risk factors for outbreaks after disasters are associated primarily with population displacement. The availability of safe water and sanitation facilities, the degree of crowding, the underlying health status of the population, and the availability of healthcare services all interact within the context of the local disease ecology to influence the risk for communicable diseases and death in the affected population. We…
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Outbreak
- Natural disaster
- Environmental health
- Communicable disease
- Context (archaeology)
- Sanitation
- Population
- Public health
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