Untangling the impacts of climate change on waterborne diseases: a systematic review of relationships between diarrheal diseases and temperature, rainfall, flooding …

K Levy, AP Woster, RS Goldstein… - Environmental science & …, 2016 - ACS Publications
Global climate change is expected to affect waterborne enteric diseases, yet to date there
has been no comprehensive, systematic review of the epidemiological literature examining …

Extreme weather events: Should drinking water quality management systems adapt to changing risk profiles?

SJ Khan, D Deere, FDL Leusch, A Humpage… - Water research, 2015 - Elsevier
Among the most widely predicted and accepted consequences of global climate change are
increases in both the frequency and severity of a variety of extreme weather events. Such …

The 'last resort'? Population movement in response to climate-related hazards in Bangladesh

EC Penning-Rowsell, P Sultana… - Environmental science & …, 2013 - Elsevier
This paper seeks to understand the 'push'and 'pull'factors affecting hazard-related migration.
A literature review and fieldwork using focus groups have explored the influence of hazards …

No calm after the storm: a systematic review of human health following flood and storm disasters

DD Saulnier, KB Ribacke… - Prehospital and disaster …, 2017 - cambridge.org
IntroductionHow the burden of disease varies during different phases after floods and after
storms is essential in order to guide a medical response, but it has not been well-described …

[PDF][PDF] Reduced death rates from cyclones in Bangladesh: what more needs to be done?

U Haque, M Hashizume, KN Kolivras… - Bulletin of the World …, 2012 - SciELO Public Health
Tropical storms, such as cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons, present major threats to coastal
communities. Around two million people worldwide have died and millions have been …

[HTML][HTML] A systematic review of cyclonic disaster: Damage-loss, consequences, adaptation strategies, and future scopes

MA Siddik, ARMT Islam - Heliyon, 2024 - cell.com
Tropical cyclones have direct and indirect repercussions in many coastal areas worldwide.
In coastal regions, several studies have identified the driving factors of cyclonic hazards and …

'I do not like her going to the shelter': stories on gendered disaster (im) mobility and wellbeing loss in coastal Bangladesh

S Ayeb-Karlsson - International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 2020 - Elsevier
The literature body on cyclone strikes in Bangladesh suggests that people sometimes fail to
evacuate, and that more women than men have died in past disasters. People's reasoning …

Stories of loss and healing: connecting non-economic loss and damage, gender-based violence and wellbeing erosion in the Asia–Pacific region

S Ayeb-Karlsson, A Chandra, KE McNamara - Climatic Change, 2023 - Springer
It is well-known that women, children, and other intersectional and marginalised social
groups are disproportionately impacted by 'non-economic wellbeing loss' in the context of …

Reducing the health effect of natural hazards in Bangladesh

RA Cash, SR Halder, M Husain, MS Islam, FH Mallick… - The Lancet, 2013 - thelancet.com
Bangladesh, with a population of 151 million people, is a country that is particularly prone to
natural disasters: 26% of the population are affected by cyclones and 70% live in flood …

Increasing the provision of mental health care for vulnerable, disaster-affected people in Bangladesh

N Nahar, Y Blomstedt, B Wu, I Kandarina… - BMC public health, 2014 - Springer
Background Bangladesh has the highest natural disaster mortality rate in the world, with
over half a million people lost to disaster events since 1970. Most of these people have died …