Social science & medicine
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Social science & medicine · Aug 2020
Long-lasting effects of distrust in government and science on mental health eight years after the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster.
We aimed to explore the effects of erosion of trust in authorities on the long-term mental health of community residents after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant accident in Japan. We investigated the effects of distrust in authorities on mental health in a cohort study following non-evacuee community residents after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant accident. A baseline questionnaire survey was administered five years after the accident for a random sample of 4900 residents outside the evacuation zone in Fukushima. ⋯ While distrust in the government was also associated with psychological distress at follow-up, the association became non-significant after controlling for baseline distress. Distrust in science at baseline was not associated with posttraumatic stress symptoms or psychological distress at follow-up. Distrust in government after a nuclear power plant accident may have adverse effects on mental health in the long-term.
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Social science & medicine · Aug 2020
Excess mortality during the Covid-19 pandemic: Early evidence from England and Wales.
The Covid-19 pandemic has claimed many lives in the UK and globally. The objective of this paper is to study whether the number of deaths not registered as Covid-19-related has increased compared to what would have been expected in the absence of the pandemic. Reasons behind this might include Covid-19 underreporting, avoiding visits to hospitals or GPs, and the effects of the lockdown. ⋯ Results suggest that there were an additional 968 weekly deaths that officially did not involve Covid-19, compared to what would have otherwise been expected. It is possible that some people are dying from Covid-19 without being diagnosed, and/or that there are excess deaths due to other causes as a result of the pandemic. Analysing the cause of death for any excess non-covid-19 deaths will shed light upon the reasons for the increase in such deaths and will help design appropriate policy responses to save lives.
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Social science & medicine · Aug 2020
The structural vulnerability of healthcare workers during COVID-19: Observations on the social context of risk and the equitable distribution of resources.
Healthcare workers have emerged as a vulnerable population group during COVID-19, and securing supply chains of personal protective equipment (PPE) has been identified as a critical issue to protect healthcare workers and to prevent health system overwhelm. While securing PPE is a complex logistical challenge facing many countries, it is vital to recognise the social and health systems issues that structure the differential degrees of risk faced by various subgroups of healthcare workers. ⋯ Healthcare workers in both high and low resource-settings globally are likely to face particular risks and vulnerabilities that are shaped by localized social and health systems factors. Qualitative social and health systems research can and should be utilized proactively in order to protect healthcare workers, to inform more equitable program design, and to create a foundation for health equity within the future of global health that emerges from the pandemic.
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Social science & medicine · Feb 2020
The legacy of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation and the political ecology of urban trees and air pollution in the United States.
This study examines the persistent impacts of historical racebased discriminatory housing policies on contemporary urban environments in the United States. Specifically, we examine the relationships between Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) grades assigned to neighborhoods in the 1930s and the current distribution of tree canopy and level of exposure to air pollution hazards. ⋯ Our findings indicate that early 20th century discriminatory housing policies exert a contemporary influence on patterns of green space exposure in American cities, with implications for health and health inequities. Our findings suggest that, in order to achieve equitable access to the benefits of urban greenspace, we must acknowledge these historical influences and consider policies and practices that directly counter these influences, for example, through targeted greenspace development in areas historically identified as unfit for investment.
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Social science & medicine · Feb 2020
Diversity of adverse childhood experiences among adolescent mothers and the intergenerational transmission of risk to children's behavior problems.
It is important to investigate the diversity and variability among adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) in young mothers because they are likely to experience considerable adverse exposures during childhood as well as challenging environments following childbirth. ⋯ Understanding the differences in how certain types of childhood adversity are associated with mothers' and their children's later health and well-being will bolster the use of only a sum score of ACEs for both how we research risk and in supporting clinicians to provide targeted care.