4.8 Article

Six-year follow-up study of residential displacement and health outcomes following the 2011 Japan Earthquake and Tsunami

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2014226118

Keywords

natural disaster; residential displacement; depression; cognitive impairment; functional limitation

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 AG042463]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [KAKENHI 15H01972, KAKENHI 23243070, KAKENHI 22390400, KAKENHI 22592327, KAKENHI 24390469]
  3. Japanese Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare [H22-Choju-Shitei-008, H24-Choju-Wakate-009, H25Choju-Ippan-003, H28-Chouju-Ippan-002]
  4. Strategic Research Foundation from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology [S0991035]

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The study examined the long-term health consequences of residential displacement following the 2011 Japan Earthquake and Tsunami. It found that group relocation was associated with increased body mass index and depressive symptoms initially, while individual relocation was linked to lower instrumental activities of daily living and higher risk of cognitive impairment in the long term. The findings suggest a complex relationship between residential relocation and health outcomes, with both positive and negative impacts on mental and physical dimensions of health.
Studies examining the long-term health consequences of residential displacement following large-scale disasters remain sparse. Following the 2011 Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, victims who lost their homes were resettled by two primary means: 1) group relocation to public housing or 2) individual relocation, in which victims moved into public housing by lottery or arranged for their own accommodation. Little is known about how the specific method of residential relocation affects survivors' health. We examined the association between residential relocation and long-term changes in mental and physical well-being. Our baseline assessment predated the disaster by 7 mo. Two follow-up surveys were conducted similar to 2.5 y and 5.5 y after the disaster to ascertain the long-term association between housing arrangement and health status. Group relocation was associated with increased body mass index and depressive symptoms at 2.5-y follow-up but was no longer significantly associated with these outcomes at 5.5-y follow-up. Individual relocation at each follow-up survey was associated with lower instrumental activities of daily living as well as higher risk of cognitive impairment. Our findings underscore the potential complexity of long-term outcomes associated with residential displacement, indicating both positive and negative impacts on mental versus physical dimensions of health.

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