Bidirectional longitudinal associations of parent and child health following the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill

IF 3.2 3区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY Population and Environment Pub Date : 2022-08-13 DOI:10.1007/s11111-022-00404-1
Samuel Stroope, Rhiannon A. Kroeger, Tim Slack, Kathryn Sweet Keating, Jaishree Beedasy, Thomas Chandler, Jeremy Brooks, Jonathan J. Sury
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This study (1) assessed whether parent health mediated associations between exposures to the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill (BP-DHOS) and child health, and whether child health mediated associations between BP-DHOS exposures and parent health; and (2) assessed bidirectional longitudinal associations between parent health and child health following the BP-DHOS. The study used three waves of panel data (2014, 2016, and 2018) from South Louisiana communities highly impacted by the BP-DHOS. Parents with children (aged 4–18 at the time of the interview) were interviewed based on a probability sample of households. Focal measures included economic and physical BP-DHOS exposures, self-reported parent health, and parent-reported child health. Health measures were gathered at three time points. The analyses included mediation analysis and estimating and comparing effect sizes of longitudinal cross-lagged effects between parent health and child health. Results showed that parent health partly mediated associations between BP-DHOS exposures and child health, and that child health partly mediated associations between BP-DHOS exposures and parent health. Paths from prior waves of parent health to subsequent waves of child health were positive and statistically significant as were paths from prior waves of child health to subsequent waves of parent health. The differences in size of the child-to-parent health effects and the parent-to-child health effects were not statistically significant. This study’s results extend evidence for the post-disaster effect of parent health on child health and the effects of child health on parent health. These findings support the contention that harm to the health of one’s family member following disasters operates as a form of resource loss deleterious to one’s health.

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英国石油公司深水地平线漏油事件后父母和儿童健康的双向纵向关联
本研究(1)评估了父母健康是否介导了2010年BP深水地平线石油泄漏(BP- dhos)暴露与儿童健康之间的关联,以及儿童健康是否介导了BP- dhos暴露与父母健康之间的关联;(2)评估了BP-DHOS后父母健康与儿童健康之间的双向纵向关联。该研究使用了受BP-DHOS严重影响的南路易斯安那州社区的三波面板数据(2014年、2016年和2018年)。有孩子的父母(采访时年龄在4-18岁)是基于家庭的概率样本进行采访的。重点措施包括经济和身体BP-DHOS暴露、父母自我报告的健康状况和父母报告的儿童健康状况。在三个时间点收集健康措施。分析包括中介分析和纵向交叉滞后效应对父母健康和儿童健康的影响量的估计和比较。结果表明,父母健康在BP-DHOS暴露与儿童健康之间起部分中介作用,儿童健康在BP-DHOS暴露与父母健康之间起部分中介作用。从前一波父母健康到后一波儿童健康的路径是正的,具有统计学意义,从前一波儿童健康到后一波父母健康的路径也是正的。孩子对父母的健康影响和父母对孩子的健康影响的大小差异无统计学意义。本研究的结果为灾后父母健康对儿童健康的影响以及儿童健康对父母健康的影响提供了进一步的证据。这些发现支持了这样一种观点,即灾难后对家庭成员健康的损害是一种有害于个人健康的资源损失形式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.10%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Population & Environment is the sole social science journal focused on interdisciplinary research on social demographic aspects of environmental issues. The journal publishes cutting-edge research that contributes new insights on the complex, reciprocal links between human populations and the natural environment in all regions and countries of the world. Quantitative, qualitative or mixed methods contributions are welcome. Disciplines commonly represented in the journal include demography, geography, sociology, human ecology, environmental economics, public health, anthropology and environmental studies. The journal publishes original research, research brief, and review articles.
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