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1 a (e.g., combat, interpersonal violence, and natural disasters).
2 llion poor people and victims of shocks (eg, natural disasters).
3 re in young children (ages 1-6) exposed to a natural disaster.
4  established but not directly exposed to the natural disaster.
5 d environment caused risk of obesity after a natural disaster.
6  mobility as an exogenous shock similar to a natural disaster.
7 n may prevent cognitive impairment following natural disaster.
8 al cost-effectiveness in the 2 years after a natural disaster.
9 on and social dynamics in the aftermath of a natural disaster.
10 xperiencing displacement, armed conflict, or natural disaster.
11 to respond to, cope with, and recover from a natural disaster.
12 living conditions has not been studied after natural disasters.
13 es because of urbanization development or by natural disasters.
14 ill patients, including those resulting from natural disasters.
15 ather events, which are responsible for most natural disasters.
16 uture highly contagious airborne diseases or natural disasters.
17 l health conditions that may be triggered by natural disasters.
18 ncy of extreme weather events and compounded natural disasters.
19 , being the main cause of people affected by natural disasters.
20 t global warming, nuclear proliferation, and natural disasters.
21 th effects are frequently reported following natural disasters.
22  other settings, such as teacher strikes and natural disasters.
23 to withstand systemic shocks of politics and natural disasters.
24 viding drinking water, which intensify after natural disasters.
25 ion effectiveness, such as living status and natural disasters.
26 ality of either of the two systems following natural disasters.
27 geted public health intervention efforts for natural disasters.
28 effectively respond, and build resilience to natural disasters.
29 erations for small rural water systems after natural disasters.
30 of inequities and is also vulnerable to many natural disasters.
31      Tropical Cyclones (TCs) are devastating natural disasters.
32 g the tipping point of communities following natural disasters.
33 has increased the frequency and intensity of natural disasters.
34 ations is one of the world's largest ongoing natural disasters.
35 tries, which are similarly at risk of having natural disasters.
36 ysical, and temporal distributions of global natural disasters.
37  prior traumatic events, such as violence or natural disasters.
38 tensions arising from disruptive events like natural disasters.
39 ate change and in particular climate-related natural disasters.
40 alized damage caused by malicious attacks or natural disasters.
41 der and depression, that are associated with natural disasters.
42 ces (as measured by oil exports) or risk for natural disasters.
43 , which has helped to mitigate the effect of natural disasters.
44 ating the severity and risks associated with natural disasters.
45 earthquakes are some of the most devastating natural disasters.
46 titive threat to indigenous populations than natural disasters.
47 g nations and regions of the world struck by natural disasters.
48 responsible for some of the most devastating natural disasters(1).
49 , is a country that is particularly prone to natural disasters: 26% of the population are affected by
50 9.6%-40.6%]) and those who had experienced a natural disaster (34.8% [95% CI, 29.4%-40.2%]).
51 r, Second World War and various conflicts or natural disasters across Africa, Asia and Central Americ
52              However, how and to what extent natural disasters affect disease risk via changes in soc
53 We conducted this study to determine whether natural disasters affect suicide rates.
54             We sought to determine whether a natural disaster affected total cardiovascular mortality
55 ion of blood collection by political unrest, natural disasters and emerging infections and implementa
56 mine how a community's ability to respond to natural disasters and infectious disease outbreaks is as
57 sent a significant threat, triggering severe natural disasters and leading to extensive damage to pro
58 ting, committing norm violations, predicting natural disasters and making health-related decisions.
59                               As the rate of natural disasters and other devastating events caused by
60 al risk is mainly caused by extreme weather, natural disasters and other events caused by climate cha
61  of some of the more important sudden impact natural disasters and potential future threats (e.g., in
62   These findings on the minimal influence of natural disasters and precipitation on permanent moves s
63 he face of increasingly intense and frequent natural disasters and question whether El Nino Southern
64 ng rate combined with frequent occurrence of natural disasters and significant climatic variations, t
65 elation between rates of persons affected by natural disasters and SST anomalies in the Eastern Pacif
66 the Earth system is essential for mitigating natural disasters and supporting human progress.
67       We separately estimated mortality from natural disasters and wars.
68  were female, 50% had recently experienced a natural disaster, and 31% had a chronic physical illness
69  is widespread and often exacerbated by war, natural disaster, and forced migration, warrant study.
70 tries, typically following war, violence, or natural disaster, and who have frequently experienced tr
71  rapid migration, development, urbanisation, natural disasters, and conflicts.
72 al areas) and exposure (before and after) to natural disasters, and determine predictors of longitudi
73 nd in the process be ready for bioterrorism, natural disasters, and epidemics of other infectious dis
74  a result of war, decolonization, epidemics, natural disasters, and other disruptive events, millions
75 sed to inform policymaking during pandemics, natural disasters, and other humanitarian crises.
76 ket bubbles, ill preparedness in the face of natural disasters, and overly aggressive medical decisio
77 erican history, including violent conflicts, natural disasters, and pathogen outbreaks such as the CO
78  catastrophic events (e.g., economic crises, natural disasters, and terrorism) by not taking into acc
79 sed power outages due to extreme weather and natural disasters, and the urgency for policy to address
80 d education, and mitigation of the effect of natural disasters; and negatives such as low gross domes
81 ulation growth rate, and deaths from war and natural disasters; and use of an ARIMA model.
82 hosocial consequences of relocation due to a natural disaster are unrelated in the long term to coron
83                          Ecosystems reset by natural disasters are also presented, emphasizing the ne
84                                     Although natural disasters are commonplace, they leave in their w
85                                              Natural disasters are often associated with forced resid
86                                 Survivors of natural disasters are thought to be at an increased risk
87                                          All natural disasters are unique in that each affected regio
88                  While the direct impacts of natural disasters are well understood, the channels thro
89  PICTs are increasingly having to respond to natural disasters associated with climate change.
90 have estimated the burden on human health of natural disasters associated with ENSO.
91   In the face of crises-wars, pandemics, and natural disasters-both increased selfishness and increas
92     Ecosystem resetting occurs when episodic natural disasters breach thresholds with little or no wa
93 untries, we explore whether vulnerability to natural disasters, brought on by either experiencing or
94 ext of climate change and recent large-scale natural disasters, but as yet relatively few large-scale
95                 Overall, we demonstrate that natural disasters can amplify and redistribute epidemic
96 ion between ENSO and populations affected by natural disasters can be described as a "natural disaste
97                             Urbanization and natural disasters can disrupt landscape connectivity, ef
98 hat academic medical centers in proximity to natural disasters can help deliver effective medical car
99                                              Natural disasters can lead to more adverse pregnancy out
100 nfrastructure damage than all other forms of natural disasters combined, are thought to be under-attr
101      Psychiatric interventions offered after natural disasters commonly address subsyndromal symptom
102 t of information in large armed conflict and natural disaster crises since 2010: we show that informa
103  by natural disasters can be described as a "natural disaster cycle".
104  high-frequency point-level power outage and natural disasters dataset in China, spanning from 2019 t
105 ties that had each been affected by a single natural disaster during that period.
106                              Experience of a natural disaster during the ages of 6 to 16 years.
107 evidence and arguments for a severe cycle of natural disasters-earthquakes, El Nino flooding, beach r
108 cological changes in addition to large-scale natural disasters, epidemics of multiple communicable di
109 nd its ability to withstand and recover from natural disasters, epidemics, and cyber-threats.
110 vents, including mass shootings, assault, or natural disasters, events that consist of concurrent mul
111               Given that COVID-19 and recent natural disasters exacerbated the shortage of medication
112                                              Natural disasters expose entire communities to stress an
113 estigate the consequences of climate-related natural disasters for long-term population mobility in r
114 armed-conflict outbreaks and climate-related natural disasters for the period 1980-2010.
115                       Our work suggests that natural disasters force individuals into new demographic
116 egion of the midsouth USA, which is prone to natural disasters from extreme climate events and is kno
117 -made threats--such as a higher incidence of natural disasters, greater disease prevalence, fewer nat
118                                       Recent natural disasters have highlighted shortfall areas in cu
119      For >2 decades, conflicts and recurrent natural disasters have maintained Somalia in a chronic h
120                                              Natural disasters have profound effects on health and re
121                              Simultaneously, natural disasters hinder their ability to operate at ful
122      In 2017, Puerto Rico suffered its worst natural disaster, Hurricane Maria, which left 3,000 dead
123  data from 4 studies of youths' responses to natural disasters (hurricanes Andrew, Charley, Ike, and
124 larations in the United States, we show that natural disasters impact a region's human capital both v
125 eriorating economy, coupled with a series of natural disasters in 1995-97, led to a severe food crisi
126 company complex humanitarian emergencies and natural disasters in both the acute phase of crisis and
127 6 Fort McMurray wildfire, one of the largest natural disasters in Canadian history.
128  Extreme wind events are among the costliest natural disasters in Europe, causing severe damages ever
129 vention using messages that highlight recent natural disasters in one's locality and demonstrate its
130             Puerto Rico has endured multiple natural disasters in recent years, including Hurricanes
131            Floods are a major contributor to natural disasters in Sumatra.
132          Hurricanes are the most destructive natural disasters in the United States.
133 ne Katrina (HK), one of the most destructive natural disasters in United States history, were more pr
134       On a global scale, the human effect of natural disasters increases during El Nino.
135             We find that as vulnerability to natural disasters increases, sustainable consumption int
136                                              Natural disasters increasingly threaten energy system re
137                                              Natural disaster-induced displacement from home in the p
138                                           As natural disasters intensify, efforts should focus on con
139                                              Natural disasters interact to affect the resilience and
140  individuals with PTSD in the aftermath of a natural disaster is associated with greater reach than U
141 f necrotizing soft-tissue infections after a natural disaster is warranted.
142 ween political ideology and vulnerability to natural disasters is absent, highlighting the unique pos
143                             Vulnerability to natural disasters is increasing globally(1-3).
144 esults suggest that living in areas prone to natural disasters is one factor associated with poor men
145  on by either experiencing or anticipating a natural disaster, is a crucial factor.
146 may be required to recover the system from a natural disaster like the hurricane Katrina.
147 n and many other unavoidable reasons such as natural disasters like droughts, floods, and cyclones.
148        Radically changed food access after a natural disaster may raise the risk of obesity among old
149  subject headings and text words (Disasters, Natural Disasters, Mental Health, Mental Health Programs
150 hed by extreme weather and potentially other natural disasters might become biologically embedded, ac
151 nd soft tissue infections was highest during natural disaster missions, intra-abdominal infections du
152 diseases and unexplained syndromes (n = 29), natural disasters (n = 81), terrorism and unintentional
153                                              Natural disasters (NDs) experienced by women and their c
154                                              Natural disasters negatively impact regions and exacerba
155 ial capital mitigates the adverse effects of natural disaster on cognitive decline.
156            The effects of climate change and natural disasters on fungal pathogens and the risks for
157  to mitigate the impact of income shock from natural disasters on populations vulnerable to HIV trans
158                We find that these impacts of natural disasters on power outage are not distributed ev
159 to 2021, to empirically assess the impact of natural disasters on power outages.
160  provision of nutrition services at times of natural disaster or conflict, and human and institutiona
161 ke Haiti, as any nation rebuilding following natural disaster or conflict, requires respect for rule
162 umatic experience such as domestic violence, natural disasters or combat-related trauma.
163               Human suffering as a result of natural disasters or conflict includes death and disabil
164 to robustly assesses how interventions, like natural disasters or conservation policies, affect ecolo
165                    Few studies have examined natural disasters or extreme weather events.
166 lution of airline alliances and responses to natural disasters or infectious diseases, as well as cha
167                           When combined with natural disasters, pandemics can further strain an alrea
168 tal health care for populations displaced by natural disasters, particularly socially vulnerable popu
169  and the annual rates of persons affected by natural disasters per 1000 population during 1964-93, gl
170 f ENSO) and the rates of persons affected by natural disasters per 1000 population were determined gl
171      Population displacement may occur after natural disasters, permanently altering the demographic
172 ed staff, fewer management challenges during natural disasters, possibly better survival in the first
173                         Hurricanes and other natural disasters produce public health and economic con
174 reduction of lifetime earnings suggests that natural disasters reduce a region's human capital by a s
175                     Most evidence shows that natural disasters reinforce trust and cooperation, but t
176         Overall, these findings suggest that natural disaster-related stress during pregnancy reprogr
177 s infections in developing countries after a natural disaster requires a multidisciplinary approach i
178 conflict, forced population displacement, or natural disasters result in high rates of excess morbidi
179 aced and had income loss after a large-scale natural disaster resulted in between 1.56 (95% CI 1.55-1
180                 Wildfires pose a significant natural disaster risk to populations and contribute to a
181 eterans, impact and needs assessments during natural disasters, risk factors for heat-related mortali
182                                 Survivors of natural disasters should be targeted with early interven
183 ssociated with small arms fire or related to natural disasters such as earthquakes or tornadoes.
184 fferent regions of the world are affected by natural disasters such as floods and earthquakes, result
185                       Climate change-related natural disasters such as floods, fires, and storms deva
186  in coastal areas are frequently affected by natural disasters, such as floods and storms.
187 ramework can potentially be applied to other natural disasters, such as hurricanes, floods, and other
188 ings following probable trauma exposure (ie, natural disaster, terrorism, and military deployment; n
189                                 Drought is a natural disaster that can affect a larger area over time
190                                 Drought is a natural disaster that often remains unnoticed until ecos
191                   Landslides are devastating natural disasters that generally occur on fragile slopes
192                         Floods are among the natural disasters that pose significant threats to both
193 -studied birth cohort was exposed to a major natural disaster (the Canterbury, New Zealand, earthquak
194 g data on exposure to an unanticipated major natural disaster, the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, we prov
195                     Following a catastrophic natural disaster, the authors evaluated whether brief ps
196 owing challenges posed by climate change and natural disasters through more sustainable practices and
197  Levels of social capital can change after a natural disaster; thus far, no study has examined how ch
198       Hurricane Maria was the worst recorded natural disaster to affect Puerto Rico.
199 nd order, ranging from terrorist attacks and natural disasters to epidemics such as AIDS and SARS.
200 perature and precipitation along with sudden natural disasters to infer their relative influence on m
201 akers and private citizens to hardships-from natural disasters to mass shootings-is to offer "thought
202                     The escalating threat of natural disasters to public safety worldwide underlines
203                 These range from response to natural disasters, to the ravages of warfare, and most r
204                                              Natural disasters trigger complex chains of events withi
205 badults, seasonal migration, and response to natural disaster-using carbon, oxygen, and strontium iso
206 periences on children and youth, focusing on natural disasters, war, and terrorism.
207 poverty, political instability, and frequent natural disasters, warrant careful analysis of Banglades
208 ce of political unrest, economic crises, and natural disasters was important.
209 ultive trauma (e.g., motor vehicle accident, natural disaster) was best explained by common and uniqu
210    For deaths due to collective violence and natural disasters, we used mortality shock regressions.
211 o increases in the frequency and severity of natural disasters, which can trigger outbreaks of fungal
212 wever, among the health effects of different natural disasters, which if recognized, can ensure that
213 xposed to higher levels of stress related to natural disasters, while greater reactivity to and proce
214            Floods are one of the most common natural disasters, with a disproportionate impact in dev
215  partner abuse, motor vehicle accidents, and natural disasters, with most participants reporting expo
216 ze Age Thera eruption was one of the largest natural disasters witnessed in human history.
217              The rate of persons affected by natural disasters worldwide is strongly associated with
218 using resources to populations affected by a natural disaster would significantly reduce the mental h

 
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