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UPA Perpustakaan Universitas Jember

Floods and Pestilence: Diseases in Philippine Urban Areas

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Do floods affect the probability for urban households to suffer from diseases?
We study Cagayan de Oro, a highly-urbanized city in the Philippines that
exhibits many of the common characteristics of urban areas in middle-income countries.
We find that bronchitis, respiratory tract infection, influenza, chicken pox,
measles, typhoid fever, diarrhea, leptospirosis, dengue, hypertension, and heart diseases
are each associated with either one or a combination of the flood variables:
exposure, height, or duration. We quantify their incremental incidence due to flood
exposure, and provide indicative estimates on their cost implications both to the
government and to the disease-affected households. In general, results reveal that
flood-induced diseases cause large cost to the government as well as heavy financial
burden on affected families, particularly among the economically disadvantaged. Cost
estimation is undertaken for the floodplains of Cagayan de Oro City, and expanded to
all urban areas in the Philippines to serve as inputs for discussions on the expansion
or redesign of policies aimed at ensuring people’s safety from disasters, diseases, and
impoverishment within a typical urban setting.

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