War exposure: an under-appreciated determinant of population health in Asia

IF 1.5 4区 社会学 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Z. Zimmer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT War exposure is a critical yet often ignored determinant of health in Asia. Cursory calculations suggest up to 80 per cent of Asians were alive at a point when a cumulatively intense war was ongoing in their country of current residence. As an example, data from Vietnam indicate that large proportions alive during past wars in that country experienced very traumatic and stressful events such as bombing in their region of residence and witnessing a war-related death. Burgeoning literature suggest that this type of exposure to wartime trauma has effects on health that continue throughout life. This evidence, coupled with the ongoing population aging across Asia and the concurrent numbers of those moving into old age that were exposed to war at some point during their life, implicates war and the trauma that comes with it as one factor shaping population health in Asia.
战争暴露:亚洲人口健康的一个被低估的决定因素
摘要在亚洲,战争暴露是一个关键但经常被忽视的健康决定因素。粗略的计算表明,高达80%的亚洲人还活着,当时他们目前居住的国家正在进行一场愈演愈烈的战争。例如,来自越南的数据表明,在该国过去的战争中,很大一部分活着的人经历了非常痛苦和紧张的事件,比如在他们的居住地发生爆炸,目睹了与战争有关的死亡。不断涌现的文献表明,这种战时创伤对健康的影响会持续一生。这一证据,再加上亚洲各地持续的人口老龄化,以及在一生中的某个时刻暴露在战争中的步入老年的人数,暗示战争及其带来的创伤是影响亚洲人口健康的一个因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
14.30%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: The first international population journal to focus exclusively on population issues in Asia, Asian Population Studies publishes original research on matters related to population in this large, complex and rapidly changing region, and welcomes substantive empirical analyses, theoretical works, applied research, and contributions to methodology.
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