Long-Term Associations between Disaster-Related Home Loss and Health and Well-Being of Older Survivors: Nine Years after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami
Journal article, 2022
OBJECTIVES: We examined the longitudinal associations between disaster-induced home loss and 34 indicators of health and well-being, assessed formula presented post-disaster. METHODS: We used data from a preexisting cohort study of Japanese older adults in an area directly impacted by the 2011 Japan Earthquake (formula presented , depending on the outcomes). The study was initiated in 2010, and disaster-related home loss status was measured in 2013 retrospectively. The 34 outcomes were assessed in 2020 and covered dimensions of physical health, mental health, health behaviors/sleep, social well-being, cognitive social capital, subjective well-being, and prosocial/altruistic behaviors. We estimated the associations between disaster-related home loss and the outcomes, using targeted maximum likelihood estimation and SuperLearner. We adjusted for pre-disaster characteristics from the wave conducted 7 months before the disaster (i.e., 2010), including prior outcome values that were available.
RESULTS: After Bonferroni correction for multiple testing, we found that home loss (vs. no home loss) was associated with increased posttraumatic stress symptoms (formula presented ; 95% CI: 0.35, 0.65), increased daily sleepiness (0.38; 95% CI: 0.21, 0.54), lower trust in the community (formula presented ; 95% CI: formula presented ), lower community attachment (formula presented ; 95% CI: formula presented ), and lower prosociality (formula presented ; 95% CI: formula presented ). We found modest evidence for the associations with increased depressive symptoms, increased hopelessness, more chronic conditions, higher body mass index, lower perceived mutual help in the community, and decreased happiness. There was little evidence for associations with the remaining 23 outcomes.
DISCUSSION: Home loss due to a disaster may have long-lasting adverse impacts on the cognitive social capital, mental health, and prosociality of older adult survivors. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP10903.
Author
Koichiro Shiba
Harvard University
Harvard School of Public Health
Hiroyuki Hikichi
Kitasato University
Sakurako S. Okuzono
Harvard School of Public Health
Tyler J. VanderWeele
Harvard School of Public Health
Harvard University
Mariana Arcaya
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Adel Daoud
University of Gothenburg
Linköping University
Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Data Science and AI
Richard G. Cowden
Harvard University
Aki Yazawa
Harvard School of Public Health
National Center for Global Health and Medicine
David T. Zhu
Western University
Jun Aida
Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences
Katsunori Kondo
Chiba University
National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology
Ichiro Kawachi
Harvard School of Public Health
Environmental health perspectives
15529924 (eISSN)
Vol. 130 7 77001-Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
DOI
10.1289/EHP10903
PubMed
35776697