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1 d health status in 2010 (i.e., predating the disaster).
2 combat, interpersonal violence, and natural disasters).
3 rticularly those with resource loss, after a disaster.
4 event cognitive impairment following natural disaster.
5 l spill clean-up after the Deepwater Horizon disaster.
6 ncreased risk of mortality on the day of the disaster.
7 effectiveness in the 2 years after a natural disaster.
8 measure vigor in the context of (simulated) disaster.
9 vel and with increasing vigor in the face of disaster.
10 n relation to one's social connections after disaster.
11 s in location do not always spell functional disaster.
12 , who experienced the same coal mining flood disaster.
13 y as an exogenous shock similar to a natural disaster.
14 cial structures affect mental health after a disaster.
15 al for societal interventions in the wake of disaster.
16 s well as in the 38-month interval after the disaster.
17 y provide the resources for deliverance from disaster.
18 of community residents in the aftermath of a disaster.
19 h would also be infeasible in a radiological disaster.
20 conducted approximately 2.5 years after the disaster.
21 roblems inherent in managing a nuclear plant disaster.
22 ork, at home, or a consequence of industrial disaster.
23 at risk of physical and mental harm in each disaster.
24 search into impacts of the DeepWater Horizon disaster.
25 oil samples from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster.
26 ocial dynamics in the aftermath of a natural disaster.
27 tudied concern for the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster.
28 hes 12-19 months after the Deepwater Horizon disaster.
29 , which places society on the precipice of a disaster.
30 ment by the replicative helicase could spell disaster.
31 e trauma of living through a climate-related disaster.
32 ators, could have mitigated or prevented the disaster.
33 cal Evaluation Study seven months before the disaster.
34 ministered approximately 2.5 years after the disaster.
35 lling adults conducted 7 months prior to the disaster.
36 nment caused risk of obesity after a natural disaster.
37 mits and been federally declared an economic disaster.
38 onditions has not been studied after natural disasters.
39 ols related to public health emergencies and disasters.
40 s one of the world's largest ongoing natural disasters.
41 and treat RIGS in cancer therapy and nuclear disasters.
42 ential to save lives and limit environmental disasters.
43 ancer and morbidity and mortality in nuclear disasters.
44 hich are similarly at risk of having natural disasters.
45 rs and refugees fleeing complex humanitarian disasters.
46 ng to improved mitigation of future flooding disasters.
47 and temporal distributions of global natural disasters.
48 for regional- and global-scale agricultural disasters.
49 d health advocacy programs to prevent future disasters.
50 raumatic events, such as violence or natural disasters.
51 vaccines and therapeutics for similar future disasters.
52 arising from disruptive events like natural disasters.
53 ge and in particular climate-related natural disasters.
54 amage caused by malicious attacks or natural disasters.
55 and minimise the effects of, future nuclear disasters.
56 k and risk perception, and social impacts of disasters.
57 depression, that are associated with natural disasters.
58 into the mental health consequences of major disasters.
59 measured by oil exports) or risk for natural disasters.
60 leveraging social capital for recovery from disasters.
61 es similarly experiencing war, protests, and disasters.
62 se of urbanization development or by natural disasters.
63 in many accidental (or malicious) radiation disasters.
64 warming, nuclear proliferation, and natural disasters.
65 g of large numbers of people in humanitarian disasters.
66 estions can help avert future lead poisoning disasters.
67 eased the frequency and intensity of natural disasters.
68 y help cultivate psychological resilience to disasters.
69 , ecological disturbances, and technological disasters.
70 sed for better risk assessments on hurricane disasters.
71 ities and is also vulnerable to many natural disasters.
74 h my immersion in cholera control, a cyclone disaster, a smallpox epidemic, and formal training in op
77 do not report evidence that climate-related disasters act as direct triggers of armed conflicts, the
80 deterioration and housing damage due to the disaster and tooth loss in a cohort of community-dwellin
82 findings on the minimal influence of natural disasters and precipitation on permanent moves supplemen
83 of increasingly intense and frequent natural disasters and question whether El Nino Southern Oscillat
84 combined with frequent occurrence of natural disasters and significant climatic variations, thus prov
85 ophic events (e.g., economic crises, natural disasters, and terrorism) by not taking into account int
87 extent to which mental health outcomes after disaster are associated with social network structures.
93 isk of all-cause mortality on the day of the disaster as well as in the 38-month interval after the d
94 ed information about personal experiences of disaster as well as incidence of cognitive disability (8
95 perceptions of wildland-urban interface fire disasters as a wildfire control problem rather than a ho
98 r case studies aimed at reducing the risk of disasters associated with floods, wildfires, storm waves
99 rticipants (N = 118) exerted effort to avoid disaster-associated states, adjusting their effort expen
106 chiatric interventions offered after natural disasters commonly address subsyndromal symptom presenta
107 ely to develop depressive symptoms after the disaster compared to those without support (ARR = 0.70;
110 nts discharged early to the community during disasters could challenge pediatricians owing to the clo
111 ormation in large armed conflict and natural disaster crises since 2010: we show that information was
112 % CI: 1.03-1.74) among those who experienced disaster damages but had also given and received social
113 We collected data from the International Disasters Database and the Global Expanded Nutrient Supp
114 ding inpatients from 7 units during 196 mock disaster days distributed across the 1-year period from
115 rticle discusses the current difficulties of disaster death attribution and describes the strengths a
116 a to estimate associations between hurricane disaster declarations, which could disrupt electrical po
117 aster preparedness resource to mitigate post-disaster depressive symptoms among older survivors of th
120 0.78); a decline in social capital after the disaster elevated the risk (relative risk = 2.44, 95% co
123 l changes in addition to large-scale natural disasters, epidemics of multiple communicable diseases,
125 the localization of entrapped victims after disaster events (e.g., earthquake, terroristic attack).
126 ncluding mass shootings, assault, or natural disasters, events that consist of concurrent multiple ac
127 l accounts of the effects of extreme weather disasters exist, the global scale effects of droughts, f
129 rn Gulf of Mexico from the Deepwater Horizon disaster, exposing marine organisms to this environmenta
131 ems.Mass extinctions are thought to produce 'disaster faunas', communities dominated by a small numbe
139 the midsouth USA, which is prone to natural disasters from extreme climate events and is known histo
140 reats--such as a higher incidence of natural disasters, greater disease prevalence, fewer natural res
141 health before and after the occurrence of a disaster has been investigated, and the results suggest
142 >2 decades, conflicts and recurrent natural disasters have maintained Somalia in a chronic humanitar
143 In recent years, several extreme weather disasters have partially or completely damaged regional
144 Beyond their immediate effects on mortality, disasters have widespread, indirect impacts on mental an
145 Martin Gerdin and colleagues argue that disaster health interventions and decision-making can be
147 Devoting too many resources to averting disaster, however, can impair quality of life, as in anx
148 ealth from these seafoods as a result of the disaster; however, the most contaminated areas were not
151 e public perceptions regarding how secondary disaster impacts (mass migration into an undamaged area)
152 was established in 2010, 7 months before the disaster in Iwanuma, a Japanese city located 80 km from
154 wind events are among the costliest natural disasters in Europe, causing severe damages every year.
160 ptoms at baseline and experiences during the disaster (including loss of loved ones, housing damage,
161 g the patterns of many ambient exposures and disasters, including extreme temperatures, heat waves, w
163 crises in history, it was foremost a social disaster induced by the lack of access to food and not t
164 timates, the community mostly relies on post-disaster insurance data, which is often not publicly ava
166 uals with PTSD in the aftermath of a natural disaster is associated with greater reach than UC, more
170 ne (TC) is one of the earth's most hazardous disasters; it is intriguing to explore whether 'Gaia-lik
174 e vulnerability of nuclear power plants to a disaster like the one that occurred at Fukushima Daiichi
180 adically changed food access after a natural disaster may raise the risk of obesity among older survi
185 ilitary medicine, humanitarian medicine, and disaster medicine that can inform in-hospital medicine,
187 ch to the delivery of timely and appropriate disaster mental health services may facilitate their int
189 tissue infections was highest during natural disaster missions, intra-abdominal infections during hos
191 hese outcomes, suggesting avenues for future disaster mitigation through the provision of mental heal
192 e very useful tool for hazard management and disaster mitigation, particularly for multi-hazard model
193 Here, we hypothesize that climate-related disaster occurrence enhances armed-conflict outbreak ris
195 elevated risk of mortality on the day of the disaster (odds ratio = 3.90 [95% CI: 1.13, 13.47]).
196 11 March 2011, the day of the unforgettable disaster of the 9 magnitude Tohoku earthquake and quickl
200 the 2010 Deepwater Horizon (Gulf of Mexico) disaster on the mental health of individuals involved in
201 deterioration and housing damage due to the disaster on tooth loss by fitting an instrumental variab
202 gate the impact of income shock from natural disasters on populations vulnerable to HIV transmission.
205 tly assesses how interventions, like natural disasters or conservation policies, affect ecological ti
208 ohort study of survivors of a major bushfire disaster, participants (N=558) were assessed for probabl
209 ohort study of survivors of a major bushfire disaster, participants (N=558) were assessed for probabl
210 ulation displacement may occur after natural disasters, permanently altering the demographic composit
211 During the recovery period after a nuclear disaster, physicians might need to screen for psychologi
212 erable people, and residents after a nuclear disaster, physicians should receive training in nuclear
213 y accounted for in public health activities, disaster planning, and determinations of network adequac
217 his article, that address topics such as IRB disaster preparedness activities, informed consent, vuln
218 ence on vulnerable subpopulations can inform disaster preparedness and the understanding of climate c
220 r pre-disaster social support functions as a disaster preparedness resource to mitigate post-disaster
224 the public to stay away from windows during disasters, promoting use of rigid eye shields by first r
225 n southern coastal Louisiana, a particularly disaster-prone area of the country, revealed high rates
227 (OSRC) work following the Deepwater Horizon disaster provide an opportunity to study associations be
228 it can limit the extent of an environmental disaster, public hazard and the associated financial imp
229 Special IRB Considerations in the Review of Disaster Related Research was formed to identify and add
236 connected to the centralized water grid for disaster relief, rural, military, and other applications
238 fluid released during the Deepwater Horizon disaster, represented with 279-280 pseudocomponents, inc
239 cerns about the vulnerability of prospective disaster research participants, increased research burde
240 ations, confidentiality, participant burden, disaster research response integration and training, IRB
242 ng group consists of a diverse collection of disaster research stakeholders across a broad spectrum o
246 ture use of Earth observation technology for disaster response and mitigation by putting past and cur
249 ting the need for more intelligent design of disaster response that is not overly reliant on optical
253 had income loss after a large-scale natural disaster resulted in between 1.56 (95% CI 1.55-1.57) and
260 ogy is applied to Lima, Peru, subjected to a disaster scenario following a magnitude 8.0 earthquake.
263 l in modern medicine, yet shortage of TPs in disaster situations and remote areas remains a worldwide
269 ons to fishing activity are common following disasters such as hurricanes, oil spills, and tsunamis,
270 bellar control.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Clumsy disasters such as spilling, dropping, and crushing durin
272 articipants, increased research burden among disaster survivors approached by multiple research teams
274 co-occur with an acme of prasinophyte algae 'disaster taxa' also dominant in Triassic-Jurassic bounda
275 ced by climatic variations, whereas episodic disasters tend to have much smaller or no impact on such
276 lowing probable trauma exposure (ie, natural disaster, terrorism, and military deployment; n = 5302 w
277 spills, such as the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) disaster that occurred in 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico, co
278 birth cohort was exposed to a major natural disaster (the Canterbury, New Zealand, earthquakes in 20
279 Approximately two and a half years after the disaster, the follow-up survey gathered information abou
281 er and the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, the two most catastrophic nuclear accidents in
282 of social capital can change after a natural disaster; thus far, no study has examined how changes in
283 and precipitation along with sudden natural disasters to infer their relative influence on migration
284 d private citizens to hardships-from natural disasters to mass shootings-is to offer "thoughts and pr
285 ese results demonstrate the dynamics of post-disaster vector-borne disease transmission, in the conte
287 political instability, and frequent natural disasters, warrant careful analysis of Bangladesh's appr
290 mise in the context of the Deepwater Horizon disaster, we investigated changes to these biomarkers as
291 aster social capital and its changes after a disaster were associated with the onset of mental disord
292 deterioration and housing damage due to the disaster were significantly associated with 8.1% and 1.7
293 d community-level social cohesion before the disaster were significantly associated with lower risks
294 motional and instrumental support before the disaster were significantly less likely to develop depre
296 ter externalizing symptoms 8 weeks after the disaster, while greater neural reactivity to pleasant im
297 o higher levels of stress related to natural disasters, while greater reactivity to and processing of
298 sources to populations affected by a natural disaster would significantly reduce the mental health bu
299 ellite data acquisitions over the earthquake disaster zone, our team undertook a satellite image surv
300 cuers during search and rescue operations in disaster zones, and to genetic computer algorithms explo