| Literature DB >> 34769708 |
Pablo A Méndez-Lázaro1, Yanina M Bernhardt2, William A Calo3, Andrea M Pacheco Díaz2, Sandra I García-Camacho2, Mirza Rivera-Lugo4, Edna Acosta-Pérez4,5, Naydi Pérez5, Ana P Ortiz-Martínez2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hurricanes are the immediate ways that people experience climate impacts in the Caribbean. These events affect socio-ecological systems and lead to major disruptions in the healthcare system, having effects on health outcomes. In September 2017, Puerto Rico (PR) and the United States Virgin Islands (USVI) experienced one of the most catastrophic hurricane seasons in recent history (Hurricane Irma was a Category 5 and Hurricane María was a Category 4 when they hit PR).Entities:
Keywords: Puerto Rico; cancer patients; environmental stressors; extreme weather events; gynecological cancer; vulnerable populations
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34769708 PMCID: PMC8583450 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182111183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Puerto Rico base map.
Figure 2Disaster declarations per season (1956–2020): Winter (DJF: December-January-February; Spring (MAM: March-April-May); Summer (JJA: June-July-August); Falls (SON: September-October-November) Source: FEMA Disaster Declaration Summary 2020. Last Updated: 19 March 2020. Accessed 17 April 2020.
Code L5: Primary and secondary environmental stressors.
| Code | Code Definition | Absolute Frequency | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key Informants (Health Providers and Administrators | Focus Groups (GYN Cancer Patients) | Total | ||
| L5.B Secondary Stressor | Stressors not inherent to the meteorological phenomenon. Secondary stressors could be those occurring during the aftermath of a climate-related disaster. Attributable or partially attributable to the disaster. | 86 | 73 | 159 |
| L5.D Physical/Environment Psychosocial Stressor | Experienced by women after the hurricanes. Evacuations, being displaced outside the home, transportation difficulties, time without electricity, telecommunications, water, availability of a power plant, damage to the home, access to materials and supplies, food, distance from the home to the clinic, and security. It is a person’s reaction to a specific situation in which a set of environmental variables are present whose disposition and intensity make them perceived as aversive. | 32 | 53 | 85 |
| L5.E Psychosocial Stressor of Health Care Systems | Experienced by women after the hurricanes. Lack of available health services. | 48 | 32 | 80 |
Figure 3Upper Panel. Percentage of environmental stressors identified by cancer patients and health providers in the aftermath of Hurricane María and codified in transcripts. Lower panel: Wordcloud atlas of environmental stressors.
Environmental stressors reported by GYN Cancer patients and Key-Informants.
| Focus Groups: Cancer Patients | ||
|---|---|---|
| Code ID | Original Version (Spanish) | English Version |
| D 22: 26 Transcription, Focus Group No. 3 | “ | “…the heat was sparkling, but you have to think that you cannot sleep under four or five concrete walls because there is no way to get rid of the heat. Therefore, you have to have the alternative of sleeping outside. I slept on the terrace!” |
| D 21: 24 Transcription, Focus Group No. 1 | “ | “I was crying, until when we will not have electricity, it was very frustrating! And checking her to see if she was breathing because my fear was that because of so much heat, she could have a low sugar episode and me sleeping. And then I would touch her, and sometimes I didn’t see her, and it was like she was breathing, and I was ok. But it was very frustrating.” |
| D 29: 25 Transcription, Focus Group No. 2: | “ | “Well, if I didn’t have a generator, of course, it was hot! In fact, look, there came a time when one … I don’t have bad memories of that … I mean the only bad thing is the thing of the generators, (all: the smell) the emissions, it’s the only thing, but yes, sometimes at night one could not sleep because of the heat, it is true.” |
| D 4: 27 Transcription, Focus Group No. 4 | “ | “Mosquitoes and heat |
| D 29: 25 Transcription, Focus Group No. 2 | “ | “I think I would have listened to my father, of having had the generator on time, before the hurricane—before the hurricane! And that scramble of being looking for water, that my neighbor came to connect the refrigerator and more than anything the emissions. I would say that was the most stress that gave me, I was always watching, and my son; “Where does the wind come from? Look to see, identify. Okay, close these windows! Then come back and open, okay, now we are going to close the others. “ I wasn’t sleeping, as you asked. You couldn’t sleep because of the heat. The heat was one thing … I don’t know if you remember that there were a couple of days in which the heat, unless well if you were sleeping with air conditioning, then |
| Key Informant Interviews | ||
| D 19: 18 Interview Transcription No. 18 | “ | “Remember that patients who are undergoing chemotherapy |
Figure 4Upper panel: Number of days with heat index > 90th percentile (38 °C) per recent years. Middle panel: number of days with heat index > 90th percentile (38 °C) per months in 2017. Lower panel: days with heat index “above normal” after landfall. The climate data used in this study are derived from the Daymet version 2 dataset, a 1-km gridded product that provides daily values of precipitation and minimum and maximum temperature interpolated and extrapolated from the Global Historical Climatology daily surface observations [33].
Figure 5Upper panel: Lights before the storm; center panel: Lights after the storm (20 September–20 November 2017), lower panel: Four months after the storm (21 November 2017–2020 January 2018). Source [55].