Explore By

This site uses cookies.

This site uses cookies to improve your online experience. To learn more about how we use cookies, please see our terms of use.

When the flood passes, does health return? A short panel examining water and food insecurity, nutrition, and disease after an extreme flood in lowland Bolivia

OBJECTIVES: Flooding is the most frequent extreme-weather disaster and disproportionately burdens marginalized populations. This article examines how food and water insecurity, blood pressure (BP), nutritional status, and diarrheal and respiratory illnesses changed during the 2 months following a historic flood in lowland Bolivia. METHODS: Drawing on longitudinal data from Tsimane’ forager-horticulturalist (n = 118 household heads; n = 129 children) directly after a historic 2014 flood and ~2 months later, we use fixed effects linear regression and random effects logistic regression models to test changes in the markers of well-being and health over the recovery process. RESULTS: Results demonstrated that water insecurity scores decreased significantly 2 month’s postflood, while food insecurity scores remained high. Adults’ systolic and diastolic BP significantly declined 2 months after the flood’s conclusion. Adults experienced losses in measures of adiposity (BMI, sum of four skinfolds, waist circumference). Children gained weight and BMI-for-age Z-scores indicating buffering of children by adults from food stress that mainly occurred in the community closer to the main market town with greater access to food aid. Odds of diarrhea showed a nonsignificant decline, while cough increased significantly for both children and adults 2 months postflood. CONCLUSIONS: Water insecurity and BP improved during the recovery process, while high levels of food insecurity persisted, and nutritional stress and respiratory illness worsened. Not all indicators of well-being and health recover at the same rate after historic flooding events. Planning for multiphase recovery is critical to improve health of marginalized populations after flooding.

Plan andino de salud y cambio climático 2020-2025 / Andean Health and Climate Change Plan 2020-2025

Human Climate Horizons (HCH)

The IAI Compendium on Climate Change Impacts in Latin America and the Caribbean

Plan andino de salud y cambio climático 2020-2025

Agenda for the Americas on Health, Environment, and Climate Change 2021–2030

Health Benefits of Open Streets in Latin America

Parental hormones are associated with crop loss and family sickness following catastrophic flooding in lowland Bolivia

Household water insecurity after a historic flood: Diarrhea and dehydration in the Bolivian Amazon

Analysis of exposure to vector-borne diseases due to flood duration, for a more complete flood hazard assessment: Llanos de Moxos, Bolivia

Indigenous food systems and climate change: Impacts of climatic shifts on the production and processing of native and traditional crops in the Bolivian Andes

Agroforestry in Bolivia: Opportunities and challenges in the context of food security and food sovereignty

Heat and hydration status: Predictors of repeated measures of urine specific gravity among Tsimane’ adults in the Bolivian Amazon

Can glacial retreat lead to migration? A critical discussion of the impact of glacier shrinkage upon population mobility in the Bolivian Andes

Agroecosystem resilience and farmers’ perceptions of climate change impacts on cocoa farms in Alto Beni, Bolivia

Water insecurity and emotional distress: Coping with supply, access, and seasonal variability of water in a Bolivian squatter settlement

The effect of rainfall during gestation and early childhood on adult height in a foraging and horticultural society of the Bolivian Amazon

Rain, temperature, and child-adolescent height among Native Amazonians in Bolivia

Improving Community WASH and Nutrition Resilience in Rural Bolivia