Living in areas with different levels of earthquake damage and association with risk of cardiovascular disease: a cohort-linkage study

The Lancet. Planetary Health
Andrea TengVicky Cameron

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease rates are known to increase immediately after a severe earthquake. However, less is known about the magnitude of this increase over time in relation to the amount of housing damage. We assessed the effect of area housing damage from a major earthquake sequence in Christchurch, Canterbury province, New Zealand, on cardiovascular disease-related hospital admissions and deaths. For this cohort-linkage study, we used linked administrative datasets from the Statistics New Zealand Integrated Data Infrastructure to identify individuals aged 45 years or older living in Christchurch from the date of the first earthquake on Sept 4, 2010. Individuals were assigned the average damage level for their residential meshblock (small neighbourhood generally comprising 10-50 dwellings) using the insurance-assessed residential building damage costs obtained from the Earthquake Commission as a proportion of property value. We calculated the rates of cardiovascular disease-related hospital admissions (including myocardial infarction) and cardiovascular disease-related mortality and rate ratios (adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, small-area deprivation index, and personal income) by level of housing damage in the first year and ...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 11, 2018·Journal of Gerontological Social Work·Joanne AllenChristine V Stephens
Feb 23, 2019·International Journal of Epidemiology·Barry J MilneAndrea Teng
Jul 20, 2019·JAMA Network Open·Diana Montoya-Williams, Elena Fuentes-Afflick
Apr 28, 2020·Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis : Official Peer-reviewed Journal of the International Society for Apheresis, the Japanese Society for Apheresis, the Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy·Michiaki AbeTadashi Ishii
Jun 1, 2018·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Jian ZhaoQun Li
May 8, 2018·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Suzanne PhibbsBruce Curtis
Mar 22, 2019·Scientific Reports·Christine ClementNick Wilson

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