TY - JOUR
T1 - A comparison of the medium-term impact and recovery of the pakistan floods and the haiti earthquake
T2 - Objective and subjective measures
AU - Weiss, William M.
AU - Kirsch, Thomas D.
AU - Doocy, Shannon
AU - Perrin, Paul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2014 World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Introduction: The 2010 Haiti earthquake and Pakistan floods were similar in their massive human impact. Although the specific events were very different, the humanitarian response to disasters is supposed to achieve the same ends. This paper contrasts the disaster effects and aims to contrast the medium-term response.Methods: In January 2011, similarly structured population-based surveys were carried out in the most affected areas using stratified cluster designs (80×20 in Pakistan and 60×20 in Haiti) with probability proportional to size sampling.Results: Displacement persisted in Haiti and Pakistan at 53% and 39% of households, respectively. In Pakistan, 95% of households reported damage to their homes and loss of income or livelihoods, and in Haiti, the rates were 93% and 85%, respectively. Frequency of displacement, and income or livelihood loss, were significantly higher in Pakistan, whereas disaster-related deaths or injuries were significantly more prevalent in Haiti.Conclusion: Given the rise in disaster frequency and costs, and the volatility of humanitarian funding streams as a result of the recent global financial crisis, it is increasingly important to measure the impact of humanitarian response against the goal of a return to normalcy.
AB - Introduction: The 2010 Haiti earthquake and Pakistan floods were similar in their massive human impact. Although the specific events were very different, the humanitarian response to disasters is supposed to achieve the same ends. This paper contrasts the disaster effects and aims to contrast the medium-term response.Methods: In January 2011, similarly structured population-based surveys were carried out in the most affected areas using stratified cluster designs (80×20 in Pakistan and 60×20 in Haiti) with probability proportional to size sampling.Results: Displacement persisted in Haiti and Pakistan at 53% and 39% of households, respectively. In Pakistan, 95% of households reported damage to their homes and loss of income or livelihoods, and in Haiti, the rates were 93% and 85%, respectively. Frequency of displacement, and income or livelihood loss, were significantly higher in Pakistan, whereas disaster-related deaths or injuries were significantly more prevalent in Haiti.Conclusion: Given the rise in disaster frequency and costs, and the volatility of humanitarian funding streams as a result of the recent global financial crisis, it is increasingly important to measure the impact of humanitarian response against the goal of a return to normalcy.
KW - Haiti
KW - Pakistan
KW - disaster response
KW - earthquake
KW - floods
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U2 - 10.1017/S1049023X14000466
DO - 10.1017/S1049023X14000466
M3 - Article
C2 - 24869915
AN - SCOPUS:84907213262
SN - 1049-023X
VL - 29
SP - 237
EP - 244
JO - Prehospital and disaster medicine
JF - Prehospital and disaster medicine
IS - 3
ER -