Mediation of the relationship between home loss and worsened cardiometabolic profiles of older disaster survivors by post-disaster relocation: A natural experiment from the Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami
Author(s)
Shiba, Koichiro; Aida, Jun; Kondo, Katsunori; Nakagomi, Atsushi; Arcaya, Mariana; James, Peter; Kawachi, Ichiro; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 Elsevier Ltd The underlying mechanism for deterioration in cardiometabolic health after major natural disasters is unknown. We leveraged natural experiment data stemming from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami (n = 1165) to examine whether specific types of post-disaster accommodations explain the association between disaster-related property damage and objectively measured cardiometabolic profiles of older disaster survivors. Causal mediation analysis showed that relocation to trailer-style temporary shelters largely mediated the associations between home loss and unhealthy changes in anthropometric measures (72.6% of 0.65 kg/m2 for body mass index and 62.3% of 3.89 cm for waist circumference), but it did not mediate the associations with serum lipid measures. This study demonstrates that there are outcome-specific pathways linking disaster damage and health of survivors.
Date issued
2020-11Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and PlanningJournal
Health and Place
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Shiba, Koichiro, Aida, Jun, Kondo, Katsunori, Nakagomi, Atsushi, Arcaya, Mariana et al. 2020. "Mediation of the relationship between home loss and worsened cardiometabolic profiles of older disaster survivors by post-disaster relocation: A natural experiment from the Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami." Health and Place, 66.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1353-8292