发展中国家自然灾害后无高死亡率的流行病活动。

Disaster health Pub Date : 2013-04-01 DOI:10.4161/dish.27283
Manuel J Loayza-Alarico, Andres G Lescano, Luis A Suarez-Ognio, Gladys M Ramirez-Prada, David L Blazes
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引用次数: 3

摘要

人类死亡率最低的自然灾害很少成为头条新闻,但经常发生,造成重大发病率和经济损失。我们比较了秘鲁在洪水、地震和火山活动后观察到的流行病活动。根据灾后指导方针,卫生保健机构和疏散中心调查了10-12个重要的健康状况,为期约45天,并将疾病频率与泊松回归进行了比较。灾难影响了20,709人,其中15%的人被安置在疏散中心。报告了7例死亡和6 056例健康状况(平均每人0.29例)。卫生机构报告的事件比疏散中心少(0.06-0.24比0.65-2.02,P < 0.001),灾害发生后疾病通报增加了1.6倍(95% CI: 1.5-1.6)。急性呼吸道感染是最常见的事件(41 ~ 57%),其次是心理困扰(7.6% ~ 14.3%)。灾后发病率上升,但没有重大伤亡,特别是在疏散中心,经常出现呼吸道感染和心理困扰。即使在低死亡率事件发生后,灾后监测也是有价值的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Epidemic activity after natural disasters without high mortality in developing settings.

Epidemic activity after natural disasters without high mortality in developing settings.

Epidemic activity after natural disasters without high mortality in developing settings.

Epidemic activity after natural disasters without high mortality in developing settings.

Natural disasters with minimal human mortality rarely capture headlines but occur frequently and result in significant morbidity and economic loss. We compared the epidemic activity observed after a flood, an earthquake, and volcanic activity in Peru. Following post-disaster guidelines, healthcare facilities and evacuation centers surveyed 10-12 significant health conditions for ~45 days and compared disease frequency with Poisson regression. The disasters affected 20,709 individuals and 15% were placed in evacuation centers. Seven deaths and 6,056 health conditions were reported (mean: 0.29 per person). Health facilities reported fewer events than evacuation centers (0.06-0.24 vs. 0.65-2.02, P < 0.001) and disease notification increased 1.6 times after the disasters (95% CI: 1.5-1.6). Acute respiratory infections were the most frequent event (41-57%) and psychological distress was second/third (7.6% to 14.3%). Morbidity increased after disasters without substantial casualties, particularly at evacuation centers, with frequent respiratory infections and psychological distress. Post-disaster surveillance is valuable even after low-mortality events.

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