Giving Compass' Take:
- Recent studies indicate the more prolonged effects of hurricanes on communities, especially for women and people of color.
- How can donors encompass climate justice in disaster recovery planning?
- Read more about climate justice here.
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New research is examining fuller perspectives on the lethality of hurricanes and tropical cyclones and revealing disproportionate harm upon women and people of color.
Death rates in areas hit by tropical cyclones are as much as 33% higher in the months following storms, a study published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association found, with women at a greater risk of injury and death than men within one month of a hurricane.
Research published in Science of the Total Environment last month also found an 11% increase in eastern North Carolina emergency room admissions for gastrointestinal illnesses during and after Hurricanes Matthew and Florence in 2016 and 2018. Black and American Indian populations saw the biggest increases, reflecting how those groups “have historically been pushed to less desirable, flood-prone land,” lead author Arbor Quist told Inside Climate News.
Heavy rain from storms can flood industrial facilities like hog waste lagoons and coal ash ponds, both of which are common in the region replete with examples of environmental racism.
Read the full article about the impact of hurricanes at EcoWatch.