| Literature DB >> 23857425 |
Shannon Doocy1, Amy Daniels, Sarah Murray, Thomas D Kirsch.
Abstract
Background. Floods are the most common natural disaster and the leading cause of natural disaster fatalities worldwide. Risk of catastrophic losses due to flooding is significant given deforestation and the increasing proximity of large populations to coastal areas, river basins and lakeshores. The objectives of this review were to describe the impact of flood events on human populations in terms of mortality, injury, and displacement and, to the extent possible, identify risk factors associated with these outcomes. This is one of five reviews on the human impact of natural disasters Methods. Data on the impact of floods were compiled using two methods, a historical review of flood events from 1980 to 2009 from multiple databases and a systematic literature review of publications ending in October 2012. Analysis included descriptive statistics, bivariate tests for associations and multinomial logistic regression of flood characteristics and mortality using Stata 11.0. Findings. There were 539,811 deaths (range: 510,941 to 568,680), 361,974 injuries and 2,821,895,005 people affected by floods between 1980 and 2009. Inconsistent reporting suggests this is an underestimate, particularly in terms of the injured and affected populations. The primary cause of flood-related mortality is drowning; in developed countries being in a motor-vehicle and male gender are associated with increased mortality, whereas female gender may be linked to higher mortality in low-income countries. Conclusions. Expanded monitoring of floods, improved mitigation measures, and effective communication with civil authorities and vulnerable populations has the potential to reduce loss of life in future flood events.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23857425 PMCID: PMC3644291 DOI: 10.1371/currents.dis.f4deb457904936b07c09daa98ee8171a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Curr ISSN: 2157-3999
* Displacement is excluded from the table because no primary data on displacement was collected in only one study, Schnitzler, 2007. ** Additional articles included from the hand searches are Schniztler 2007, Jonkman 2009, Biswas 2010 and Bich 2011.
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| Janerich, 1981 | Hurricane Agnes, 1972, New York, US | Epidemiologic investigation of cancer cases in rural town | Not reported | 4 leukemia and lymphoma cases investigated; no increased risk due to flood/environmental hazards identified |
| Duclos,1991 | October 1988,Nimes, France | Surveillance and household survey (n=108) to assess flood health effects | 9 drowning deaths reported including two individuals attempting rescues; no risk factors reported | Injuries from surveillance (n=18) included: 3 severe, 3 near drowning, 2 hypothermia, and 10 minor injuries; 6% of 228 survey participants reported minor injuries |
| Siddique, 1991 | Mid-1988, Bangladesh | Record review of health facilities and verbal autopsy | 9 of 154 (6%) deaths were directly due to flooding | 5% (2,367/46,470) of patients had infected injuries |
| CDC, 1993 | Mid- 1993, Missouri, US | Public health surveillance and medical record review | 27 deaths including 21 (78%) direct (drowning); 67% (n=18) of deceased were male | Not reported |
| CDC, 1993 | Summer 1993,Missouri, US | Surveillance of flood-related injuries and illnesses reported at hospitals | Not reported | 524 flood-related conditions: 250 injuries (48%) and 233 (45%) illnesses; common injuries were sprains/strains (34%), lacerations (24%), abrasions/contusions (11%) |
| CDC, 1994 | July, 1994,Georgia, US | Record review of flood-related deaths | 28 deaths, 96% (n=27) due to drowning; at risk groups were males (71%), adults (86%), and car related (71%) | Not reported |
| Staes, 1994 | Jan 1992,Puerto Rico, US | Descriptive and case-control study of flood mortality | 23 deaths; 22 (96%) drowning and 1 (4%) carbon monoxide poisoning; motor vehicles as risk factor | Not reported |
| Grigg, 1999 | July 1997,Colorado, US | Descriptive/historical account | 5 deaths reported; 80% were trailer park residents | 54 injuries reported; no additional information reported |
| CDC, 2000 | Oct 1998, Texas, US | Public health surveillance and medical record review | 31 deaths mostly from drowning (n=24, 77%) and trauma (n=3, 10%); most were male and car related | Not reported |
| Rashid, 2000 | 1998, Dhaka Bangladesh | Qualitative survey | 918 officially reported flood deaths; qualitative study observed 1200 deaths of which 2% were drownings | Not reported |
| Ogden, 2001 | May 1995,Louisiana, US | Surveillance and record review of disaster-area hospitals and patient visits | Not reported | 1855 post-flood injuries, including musculoskeletal (n=791, 46%), lacerations (n=385, 21%), motor vehicle (n=142, 8%), falls (n=134, 7%), and other (n=296, 16%) |
| Yale, 2003 | Sept 1999, North Carolina, US | Case-control study of vehicle crashes with drowning | ü 22 deaths reported; males and adults were disproportionately represented | Not reported |
| Cariappa, 2003 | July 2001,Orissa, India | Assessment of flood-related illness/injury in care seekers | Not reported | 13% (976/7450) of health facility visits due to injury; males and those 11-40yrs accounted for most injuries |
| Baxter, 2005 | Jan & Feb1953, UK | Descriptive/historical account | 307 deaths due to drowning and exposure; elderly and coastal/poor construction residents were most at risk | Not reported |
| Gerritsen, 2005 | Jan & Feb 1953, The Netherlands | Descriptive review / historical account | 1836 deaths; no additional information reported | Not reported |
| Pradhan, 2007 | July 1993, Sarlahi District, Nepal | Household survey in flood affected areas | ü 302 deaths; CMR 7.3/1000; females and young children had greatest risk of death | Not reported |
| Spencer, 2007 | Summer 1977,Pennsylvania, US | Descriptive/historical account | ü 78 deaths; no additional information reported | Not reported |
| Schnitzler, 2007 | August 2002, Saxony, Germany | Telephone survey of flood affected households | ü Not reported | 55 (11.7%) of the survey population was injured; risk of injury was increased among those who came into contact with flood water (OR 17.8, 95% CI 17.8– 30.5). |
| Jonkman, 2009 | August 2005,New Orleans | Secondary data analysis of characteristics associated with flood-related mortality following hurricane Katrina | ü Overall mortality percent among exposed was 1%. 853 deaths reported, including 51% male (n=432) and 49% (n=421) female. The majority (85%, 705/829) were among those > 51 yrs of age. In deaths where race was reported (n=819), 55% were African American, 40% white, and 2% other. | Not reported |
| Biswas, 2010 | Summer 2007, Bangladesh | Household survey of child injury in flood-affected areas | ü Not reported | >18% (n=117) children injured were during flood; injuries included 38% lacerations, 22% falls, 21% drowning, 8% road traffic, 6% burns, 5% animal bites. |
| Bich TH, 2011 | October and November 2008, Hanoii, Vietnam | Cross-sectional household survey | ü 2 deaths, no additional information reported | 27 injuries, including 18 lacerations/contusions/cuts, 3 fractures, 1 trauma and 5 others. Causes of injuries included falls (16), near-drowning (1) and other (10). |
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| Statistical Bulletin 1974 | Review of tornado, flood and hurricane associated mortality in the US from 1965 to 1974 | More than 1,200 flood deaths in the United States during the review period with a concentrated in a few large events. 14 major river systems were linked to flood deaths; damage can be mitigated through reforestation, construction of reservoirs and flood walls, diversion, and improved early warning and forecasting systems. |
| French et al., 1983 | Review of National Weather Service flash floods reports from 1969 to 1981 to assess mortality effects of warning systems | Floods were the primary cause of weather-related deaths. There were 1,185 deaths in 32 flash floods with an average of 37 deaths per flood; the highest mortality was associated with dams breaking after heavy rains. Mortality was greater earlier in the study period and twice as many deaths occurred in areas with inadequate warning systems. 93% of deaths were due to drowning, of which 42% were car related. |
| Avakyan 1999 | Review of global flood events from 1997 to 1999 using Dartmouth Flood Observatory data | Damage due to floods increased over time due to more development in flood-affected areas; mapping and regulation of flood hazards zones are necessary to mitigate damage. Globally Bangladesh is the most affected by floods. Number of events, victims, evacuees and damage are reported for each year. |
| Berz, 2000 | Review of the impacts of major floods in the last half of the 20th century and summary of significant floods from 1990 to 1998 from the Munich Re natural event loss database | Floods account for half of all natural disaster deaths; trend analysis suggests the frequency of and damages associated with floods have increased over time. Excluding storm surges, the three most deadly flood events from 1990 to 1998 were in India, Nepal and Bangladesh in 1998–4750 deaths, China in 1998–3656 deaths, and China in 1993-3300 deaths. Explanations for increased mortality include population growth, vulnerability of structures, construction in flood-prone areas, flood protection system failures and changes in environmental conditions. |
| Beyhun, Altintas & Noji, 2005 | Review of the impact of flooding in Turkey from 1970 to 1996 | 624 floods recorded during study period, including 83 fatal events with 539 deaths. There was an association between deaths and material losses, close to half of flood events occurred in summer months, and 37% of deaths in the Black Sea region. |
| Guzzetti, 2005 | Review of flood and landslide related deaths, missing persons, injuries and homelessness in Italy from 1279 to 2002 | 50,593 people died, went missing, or were injured in 2,580 flood and landslide events and over 733,000 were displaced. Floods accounted for 38,242 deaths; fatal events were most frequent in the northern Alpine regions and mortality was highest in autumn. Floods were caused by high-intensity or prolonged rainfall, snow melt, overtopping or failure of levees, embankments, or dams, and reservoir mismanagement. Since World War II, landslide has exceeded flood mortality and is comparable to earthquake mortality. |
| Jonkman & Kelman, 2005 | Examination of the causes and circumstances of 247 flood disaster deaths across 13 flood events in Europe and the US | Two-thirds of deaths were due to drowning. Being male and engaging in high risk behavior during flood events were also linked to increased flood mortality. Findings with respect to age-related vulnerability were inconsistent. Authors call for standardization of data collection methodologies across regions and flood types to improve policies and strategies to reduce flood-related death. |
| Jonkman, 2005 | Review of mortality from river floods, flash floods and drainage problems from 1975 to 2002 using the CRED Database | Of all disaster types, floods affect the most people; there were1816 events with 175,000 deaths and 2.2 billion affected from 1975-2002. The deadliest freshwater flood events were Venezuela (1999, 30,000 deaths), Afghanistan (1998, 6,345 deaths), and China (1980, 6,200 deaths). Flash floods resulted in the highest average mortality per event. Average mortality (# fatalities / # affected) was constant across continents while impact magnitude (#s of dead and affected) varied between continents. |
| Tarhule, 2005 | Review of newspaper accounts of rainfall and rain-induced flooding in the Sahel savanna zone of Niger from 1970 to 2000 | 53 articles reported 79 damaging rainfall and flood events in 47 communities in the Sahel of Niger during the study period; floods destroyed 5,580 houses, killed 18, left 27,289 homeless, and caused over $4 million in damages. Sahel residents attribute floods to five major causes: hydrologic, extreme/unseasonable rainfall, location of affected area, inadequate drainage, and poor construction; cumulative rainfall in the days preceding a heavy rain event is an important predictor of flooding. |
| Lastoria, 2006 | Review of flood deaths and socioeconomic impacts in Italy,1951 to 2003 | During study period, ~50% of the flood events resulted in an average of 5 deaths, and about ~10% had >100 deaths. Investigators recommend creating an integrated database to collect more information about flood events in Europe. |
| Llewellyn, 2006 | Review mortality, injury, illness and infectious disease associated with major, recent floods events | In the US, as much as 90% of natural disaster damage (excluding droughts) is caused by floods which cost $3.7 billion annually from 1988 to 1997. There were an average of 110 flood deaths/yr from Between 1940 to 1999, mostly in flash floods and automobile related. Most flood related injuries are mild, and predominantly consist of cuts, lacerations, puncture wounds, and strains/sprains to extremities. |
| Ahern, 2005 | Review of studies of global flood events and assessment of gaps in knowledge relative to reducing public health impact of flooding | Review of 212 epidemiologic studies with detailed findings reported for 36 studies. The majority of flood deaths were due to drowning; deaths due were diarrhea inconclusive though there is some evidence to support increased risk of fecal-oral disease, vector-borne disease and rodent-borne disease. There is a lack of data on frequency of non-fatal flood injury. |
| Ashley & Ashley, 2008 | Review of flood fatalities in the United States from 1959 to 2005 | 4,585 fatalities over a 47 year period were reported (97.6 deaths/year). No significant increase in flood mortality over time was observed. The majority of flood-related deaths were in flash floods and were motor-vehicle related (63%). Increased risk of flood-related death was observed in individuals ages 10-29 and >60 years. |
| Jonkman & Vrijling, 2008 | Review of mortality attributed to different flood types and presentation of new method for estimating flood related deaths in low-lying areas | Reports on 1883 coastal flood events between 1975 and 2002 resulting in 176,874 deaths and 2.27 billion affected. Mortality by event type was reported as follows: 70 from drainage floods, 392 from river floods and 234 from flash floods. Flood mortality was affected by severity of flood impacts and warning and evacuation. Primary determinants of flood-related death include: lack of warning, inability to reach shelter, building collapse, water depth, rapid rise in water level, water flow velocity, children, and elderly. Applies a new method for estimating loss of life due to floods based on flood characteristics and numbers exposed and mortality among exposed are introduced. |
| FitzGerald, 2010 | Review of flood fatalities in Australia from 1997 to 2008 | Estimated 73 flood-related deaths reported from newspapers and historic accounts from 1997 to 2008 in Australia. Most fatalities occurred in the summer months. Drowning deaths were more likely among individuals between the 10-29 and >70 years of age. No difference decline in deaths over time reported. 49% of deaths were motor-vehicle related and 27% were attributed to high risk behavior. |
*Figures are based on the highest reported number of deaths or injuries in an event. Deaths were reported in 4,093 events. Homeless, injured, and total affected populations are reported only by EM-DAT, thus ranges are not presented for overall impact estimates.
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| Deaths | 4,093 | 539,811 | 510,941-568,680 | ||
| Injuries | 401 | 362,122 | --- | ||
| Homeless | 611 | 4,580,522 | --- | ||
| Total Affected | 2,632 | 2,898,579,881 | --- | ||
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| Reported by EM-DAT | 2,646 | 64.6% | 10 | 74 | 0-30,000 |
| Reported by DFO | 2,732 | 66.75% | 11 | 166 | 0-138,000 |
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| Reported by EM-DAT | 2,146 | 52.4% | 10 | 87 | 1-30,000 |
| Reported by DFO | 1,289 | 31.5% | 13 | 178 | 1-138,000 |
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| 401 | 9.8% | 12.5 | 904 | 0-249,378 |
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| 611 | 14.9% | 15 | 7,506 | 0-2,951,315 |
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| 2,632 | 64.3% | 6,000 | 1,071,829 | 0-238,973,000 |
*GINI coefficient scores for income distribution range from 0 to 100 with 0 representing a perfect equality and 100 perfect inequality.59
** Magnitude is a composite score of flood severity created by DFO that includes flood duration and affected area size, with the following categories: low magnitude,6.0. Flood magnitude is only available for events from 1985 onward.
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| 1980 | 121 (17%) | 149 (11%) | 212 (17%) | 205 (26%) | <.001 |
| 1990 | 191 (27%) | 418 (30%) | 437 (35%) | 317 (40%) | |
| 2000 | 394 (55%) | 811 (58) | 574 (45%) | 263 (33%) | |
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| Low income | 172(24%) | 263 (20%) | 370 (30%) | 365 (45%) | <.001 |
| Lower Middle income | 164 (23%) | 395 (29%) | 465 (38%) | 328 (41%) | |
| Upper-middle income | 142 (20%) | 276 (21%) | 219 (18%) | 79 (10%) | |
| High Income | 227 (32%) | 408 (30%) | 176 (14%) | 33 (4%) | |
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| Africa | 139 (20%) | 228 (17%) | 157 (13%) | 73 (8%) | <.001 |
| Americas | 182 (26%) | 387 (29%) | 293 (24%) | 122(15%) | |
| Eastern Mediterranean | 46 (6%) | 107 (8%) | 147 (12%) | 74 (9%) | |
| European | 171 (23%) | 246 (18%) | 104 (9%) | 26 (3%) | |
| South East Asian | 47 (7%) | 137 (10%) | 229 (19%) | 264 (33%) | |
| Western Pacific | 124 (18%) | 238 (18%) | 299 (24%) | 262 (32%) | |
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| 14,827 (18,077) | 14,330 (17,710) | 1,457(12,563) | 3,325(6,518) | <.001 |
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| 40.2 (7.6) | 41.0 (7.7) | 41.7 (7.9) | 41.3 (7.1) | 0.004 |
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| 4.8 (1.2) | 4.9 (1.1) | 5.3 (1.0) | 6.0 (1.1) | <.001 |
* Reference is “no deaths” for all categories (n=743) **see Table 4 notes for definition of flood magnitude
| Characteristic | 1-9 deaths COR (95% CI) | P- value | 10-49 deaths COR (95% CI) | P- value | >50 deaths COR (95% CI) | P-value |
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| 1980 | Reference | Reference | Reference | |||
| 1990 | 1.09 (0.87, 1.37) | .426 | 1.64 (1.29-2.07) | <.001 | 2.61 (1.99-3.42) | <.001 |
| 2000 | 0.86 (0.64, 1.15) | .313 | 1.85 (1.39-2.46) | <.001 | 4,46 (3.22-6.18) | <.001 |
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| AMRO | Reference | Reference | Reference | |||
| AFRO | 1.09 (0.76-1.55) | .0.62 | 0.58 (0.41-0.84) | .005 | 0.35 (0.22-0.56) | <.001 |
| EURO | 0.72 (0.54-0.96) | .024 | 0.45 (0.32-0.63) | <.001 | 0.31 (0.18-0.52) | <.001 |
| EMRO | 1.31 (0.83-2.06) | .240 | 1.49 (0.95-2.33) | .082 | 1.31 (0.78-2.21) | .3120 |
| WPRO | 0.80(0.59-1.09) | .165 | 1.22 (0.88-1.67) | .217 | 2.38(1.62-3.49) | <.001 |
| SEARO | 1.61(1.04-2.49) | .032 | 2.15 (1.40-3.29) | <.001 | 3.35 (2.21-5.72) | <.001 |
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| Low | Reference | Reference | Reference | |||
| Lower middle | 152 (1.06-1.92) | 0.007 | 0.99 (0.74-1.34) | .992 | 0.59 (0.43-0.82) | 0.002 |
| Upper middle | 1.56 (1.05-2.13) | 0.014 | 0.90 (0.62-1.29) | .576 | 0.39 (0.24-0.61) | <.001 |
| High | 1.16 (0.86-1.71) | 0.400 | 0.29 (0.20-0.42) | <.001 | 0.05 (0.03-0.08) | <.001 |
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| Low | Reference | Reference | Reference | |||
| Medium Low | 1.03 (0.74, 1.44) | .859 | 1.47 (1.03, 2.10) | .035 | 1.52 (.95, 2.43) | .0878 |
| Medium High | 1.19 (0.85, 1.69) | .310 | 2.19 (1.50, 3.16) | <.001 | 3.87 (2.45, 6.10) | <.001 |
| High | 0.91 (0.62, 1.35) | .664 | 2.37 (1.58, 3.55) | <.001 | 13.20 (8.25, 21.11) | <.001 |
| Missing | 0.19 (0.15, 0.25) | <.001 | 0.32 (0.24, 0.43) | <.001 | 0.59 (0.40, 0.87) | .007 |
*excludes 1150 deaths from diarrhea and other possibly deaths reported during the 4 month period surrounding the event
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| Total | Direct | Indirect | Drowning | Other Causes | Males | Female | ||||
| Duclos,1991 | France, 1988 | 9 | 9 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 9 (100%) | 0 (0%) | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | |
| CDC, 1993 | USA, 1993 | 27 | 21 (78%) | 6 (22%) | 21 (78%) | 2 (7%) electrocution2 (7%) vehicle accident 2 (7%) cardiac arrest | 18 (67%) | 9 (33%) | Average age = 38(range 9-88) | 13 (48%) |
| CDC,1994 | USA, 1994 | 28 | 27 (96%) | 1 (4%) | 27 (96%) | 1 (4%) other | 20 (71%) | 8 (29%) | Average age = 31(range 2-84) | 20 (71%) |
| Staes,1994 | USA, 1992 | 23 | 22 (96%) | 1 (4%) | 22 (96%) | 1 (4%) carbon monoxide poisoning | 10 (43%) | 13 (57%) | 16 (70%) ≥ 16 yrs | 20 (87%) |
| Grigg, 1999 | USA, 1997 | 5 | 5 (100%) | 0 (0%) | Not reported | 5 (100%) | 0 (0%) | All adults | Not reported | |
| CDC, 2000 | USA, 1998 | 31 | 29 (94%) | 2 (6%) | 24 (77%) | 3 (10%) trauma1 (3%) hypothermia1 (3%) cardiac arrest2 (6%) other | 20 (65%) | 11 (35%) | Median age = 38(range 2-83) | 22 (71%) |
| Rashid, 2000 | Bangladesh, 1998 | 50* | Not reported | 24 (48%) | 21 (42%) electrocution 5 (10%) snake bites | Not reported | Children accounted for 92% (22/24) of drownings | Not reported | ||
| Yale, 2003 | USA, 1999 | 22 | 22 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 22 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 17 (77%) | 5 (23%) | 21 (95%) adults | 22 (100%) |
| Pradhan, 2007 | Nepal, 1992 | 302 | Not reported | Not reported | 126 (42%) | 176 (58%) | 164 (54%) children138 (46%) adults | Not reported | ||
| Jonkman et al., 2009 | USA, 2005 | 853 | Not reported | Not reported | 432 (51%) | 421 (49%) | 705 (85%) older than 51 yrs, 60% over 65 yrs | Not reported | ||
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