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Citation

Frankenberg, Elizabeth; Ingwersen, Nicholas; Iwo, Rene; Sumantri, Cecep; & Thomas, Duncan (2023). Impacts of Disaster-Induced Death and Destruction on Health and Mortality over the Longer Term.. Ortiz, Selena E.; McHale, Susan M.; King, Valarie; & Glick, Jennifer E. (Eds.) (pp. 3-22). Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature.

Abstract

Climate change is increasing the frequency and intensifying the force of natural disasters at the same time that populations in vulnerable areas are growing in size. Projections that take the combination of these forces into account indicate that relative to their parents and grandparents, today’s children and young adults will experience a four- to sevenfold increase in the number of extreme events they live through (Thiery et al., 2021). Understanding the sustained impacts of these events on health and well-being is critically important, but a key constraint is the paucity of highquality longitudinal data that can advance the science.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-22649-6

Reference Type

Book Section

Year Published

2023

Series Title

National Symposium on Family Issues

Author(s)

Frankenberg, Elizabeth
Ingwersen, Nicholas
Iwo, Rene
Sumantri, Cecep
Thomas, Duncan

Data Set/Study

Study of the Tsunami Aftermath and Recovery (STAR)

Continent/Country

Indonesia

ORCiD

Frankenberg - 0000-0003-0671-9684