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Morbidity and mortality disparities among colonist and indigenous populations in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

机译:厄瓜多尔亚马孙地区殖民者和土著居民之间的发病率和死亡率差异。

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Rural populations living in the northern Ecuadorian Amazon (NEA) experience the highest health burden of any region in the country. Two independent studies of colonist and indigenous groups living in the NEA are used to compare their morbidity and mortality experiences. Colonist data are from a probability sample of land plots in 1999, while indigenous data are from a representative sample of the five largest ethnicities (Quichua, Shuar, Huaorani, Cofan, Secoya) collected in 2001. Poisson regression was used to compare morbidity. Results indicate clear differences in health between populations. Indigenous groups had 30% higher probability of mortality and 63% higher incidence rate of all-cause morbidity compared to colonists. Vector-borne, chronic, gastrointestinal, and diseases of unknown origin were particularly high among indigenous groups. Factors associated with morbidity varied: morbidity rates were similar for the two youngest age groups (0-4 and 5-9), but indigenous people aged 15-39 and 40+ had almost double the morbidity compared to colonists; larger households, later months of data collection and less pollution were associated with less morbidity in both groups; better infrastructure access (electricity and roads) was generally associated with lower morbidity in both groups; and associations of land use were different by group with more cultivation of perennials and fewer annuals associated with less morbidity for colonists, but more for indigenous groups. These results demonstrate the health disparities that exist among indigenous and non-indigenous populations even when living in the same geographic region. Land use itself exemplifies the cultural and contextual differences that are evident in health, since land use decisions are related to broader demographic and economic factors that influence overall ecological and human health. Ongoing population-environment and/or environment-health research needs to recognize the broader factors involved when studying relationships between population health, development and deforestation.
机译:生活在厄瓜多尔北部亚马逊地区(NEA)的农村人口承受着该国任何地区最高的健康负担。对居住在NEA的殖民者和土著群体进行了两项独立研究,以比较其发病率和死亡率。殖民者数据来自于1999年一块土地的概率样本,而土著数据来自于2001年收集的五个最大种族(基丘亚族,舒亚尔,Huaorani,科范,塞科亚)的代表性样本。使用Poisson回归比较发病率。结果表明人群之间的健康状况明显不同。与殖民者相比,土著人群的死亡率高出30%,全因发病率高63%。在土著人群中,媒介传播的,慢性的,胃肠道的和未知来源的疾病特别多。与发病率相关的因素各不相同:两个最年轻的年龄组(0-4岁和5-9岁)的发病率相似,但15-39岁和40岁以上的土著居民的发病率几乎是殖民者的两倍。两组的发病率均较高,家庭数量增加,数据收集的后期数月减少,污染减少。两组的发病率较低通常与更好的基础设施访问(电力和道路)有关;土地使用的关联性因组而异,多年生植物的种植量更多,而一年生植物的发病率却相对较低,而殖民者的发病率却较低,而土著群体的发病率却更高。这些结果表明,即使居住在同一地理区域,土著人民和非土著人民之间也存在健康差异。土地使用本身就是健康方面明显的文化和背景差异,因为土地使用决策与影响总体生态和人类健康的更广泛的人口和经济因素有关。正在进行的人口环境和/或环境健康研究需要认识到研究人口健康,发展与森林砍伐之间的关系时涉及的更广泛因素。

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