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Journal Article

Citation

Li SQ, Tan HZ, Li XL, Zhou J, Liu AZ, Yang TB, Tang XM, Li LL, Zhang XM, Xiang BL, He HX, Tang SL. Zhonghua Liu Xing Bing Xue Za Zhi 2004; 25(1): 36-39.

Affiliation

Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Center South University, Changsha 410078, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Zhonghua yi xue hui)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15061944

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the immediate and long-term effects of disasters caused by floods on residents health status. METHODS: Stratified sampling by ranks of flood disaster occurred in 1996 and 1998, flood disaster areas and control areas were carried out. A retrospective study was also carried out to study all diseases involved during 1996 - 1999. RESULTS: The incident rates of acute infectious disease in flooding areas in 1996 and 1998 were both higher than those of non-flooding areas (863.181/100 000 and 736.591/100 000, respectively). But there was no different between the incident rate of the first years in flooding areas and that of non-flooding areas. The prevalence rates of 8 kinds of chronic diseases related to circulatory system, nervous system, digestive system, injury and poisonous diseases in flooding areas were also higher than that in the non-flooding areas. The highest incidence rates of most diseases were in the mountainous flooding areas, followed by areas collapsed by flooding, and the lowest were seen in soakedareas by floods. The incidence rates of intestinal infectious diseases and respiratory infectious diseases were lower in areas where prevention and control measures were weak. CONCLUSION: Flood could lead to the increase of incidence rates both on acute infectious diseases and non-infectious diseases. Interventions on non-infectious diseases should also be enforced to stop the epidemics when preventing and controlling acute infectious disease.


Language: zh

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