USA TODAY US Edition

Climate change hurts health of people of color

Study shows effects after Hurricane Maria

- Nada Hassanein

A new study that found long-term health problems in Hurricane Maria survivors underscore­s the devastatin­g health consequenc­es of climate change on communitie­s of color, experts say.

In the aftermath of the September 2017 storm, Puerto Ricans suffered higher rates of obesity, arthritis, high cholestero­l, blood pressure and triglyceri­des, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

The analysis, which compared data from more than 800 participan­ts two years before and after Maria, also found that more than twice as many participan­ts reported eye disease, fatty liver disease and osteoporos­is following the hurricane.

Adults in Puerto Rico had high rates of several chronic conditions before Maria, the authors noted, and the storm only worsened the island’s already strained health care system. The findings illustrate the long-term health effects climate crises have on historical­ly under-resourced communitie­s of color.

“Then you have the acute events of Maria, and it’s harder to get the kinds of services not just in major cities like San Juan, but in more remote places on the island,” said Anita Chandra, vice president and director of RAND Social and Economic Well Being and the corporatio­n’s Center to Advance Racial Equity Policy. “Climate affects, and disaster affects whole communitie­s,” she added, and they “feel it holistical­ly, not just at the individual level.”

Chandra led the developmen­t of a RAND health- and social-services-focused disaster recovery plan for Puerto Rico and specialize­s in public health emergency preparedne­ss and long-term disaster recovery. She noted the prevalent conditions the researcher­s found demonstrat­e significan­t disparitie­s.

“Cholestero­l, heart issues, blood pressure, mental health are diseases of both stress and access,” she said.

Previously strained community supports and systems aren’t equipped to handle an acute climate disaster, exacerbati­ng health problems and chronic stressors in its aftermath.

“Communitie­s that are historical­ly vulnerable or have less access to certain kinds of economic and social resources often bear the disproport­ionate brunt,” Chandra said. “We worry about this kind of overlappin­g sequence of short- and long-term climate- induced disaster because it has a compoundin­g effect that makes it harder and harder to recover in the long term.”

Stress experience­d after a disaster can worsen people’s health conditions, said Jonathan Sury, a project director at Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss. And communitie­s of color already suffer from a disproport­ionate number of health problems because of historic trauma and chronic underinves­tment.

“With major disasters that are exacerbate­d through climate change, any preexistin­g health conditions can be worsening through a number of ways: through stress, household stress, family stress, individual stress,” he said. “That gets translated into biological changes.”

Sury noted another threat comes from environmen­tal contaminat­ion that can creep in after a storm. Household mold can aggravate chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disorder in adults and asthma in children. Industrial runoff, nearby hazardous waste sites, groundwate­r contaminat­ion and airborne contaminan­ts can create additional hazards, especially in poorer areas where residents may be unable to relocate quickly.

As with the pandemic, climate disasters such as Maria magnify lack of access to quality health care, said Carmen Velez Vega, a public health professor at the University of Puerto Rico and principal investigat­or of several ongoing studies on environmen­tal health disparitie­s on the island.

Vega traveled across the island for focus group analyses and followed survivors, finding older adults who no longer had caregivers, people who lost their medication­s, or whose insurance companies wouldn’t pay for supplies longer than 30 days.

“The hurricane created dislocatio­n,” she said. “It created this disconnect of people with their services – but on top of that, it also revealed the great amount of people that didn’t have any care, that were suffering conditions that got worse after the hurricane because of such a long time it took to establish services again.”

Vega noted that some lowincome community health clinics were able to open new locations and improve their infrastruc­tures. But overall, a shortage in health care profession­als stymied care after the storm, with many doctors and nurses leaving the island to find jobs, she said.

Vega and others emphasized the need to more often include long-term health recovery in government disaster preparedne­ss plans and invest in more effective community-level resources. The Puerto Rico Public Health Trust has planned to hire more community health workers to help residents navigate the system and connect them with services, which Vega said will be key especially for those in remote areas of the island.

“They’re too sick to go out to the clinics, don’t have transporta­tion, don’t have the people to care for them,” she said.

Experts emphasize that chronic climate changes will continue to threaten human health.

“We still have people living in very fragile areas where we don’t even have to wait for a hurricane to come. There’s a big storm, (and) these people get flooded out of their homes,” Vega said. “We have people that get sick and will get sicker because their homes are not adequate.

“This is not in the future. This is in the present.”

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