Journal article
Vulnerability and recovery: Long-term mental and physical health trajectories following climate-related disasters
A Li, M Toll, E Martino, I Wiesel, F Botha, R Bentley
Social Science and Medicine | Published : 2023
Abstract
Extreme weather and climate-related disaster events are associated with a range of adverse health outcomes. People are not equally vulnerable to the adversity, experiencing varied patterns of long-term health trajectories in recovery depending on their vulnerabilities, capacities, and resiliencies. This study aims to identify latent mental and physical health trajectories and their associations with person- and place-based pre-disaster predictors. Using an Australian, population-based, longitudinal dataset spanning 2009–19, group-based multi-trajectory modelling was applied to identify the distinct mental, social, emotional, and physical health trajectories of people who had experienced dama..
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Grants
Awarded by Lord Mayor’s Charitable Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
This research has been conducted with funding support from the National Health and Medical Research Council Centre of Research Excellence in Healthy Housing (1196456) , the University of Melbourne Affordable Housing Hallmark Research Initiative Seed Funding, Australian Research Councils Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course (CE200100025) , and Lord Mayors Char- itable Foundation (Proactive Grant) .