Litcius/Paper detail

Health and wellbeing implications of adaptation to flood risk

Tara Quinn, Stacey C. Heath, W. Neil Adger, Mumuni Abu, Catherine Butler, Samuel Nii Ardey Codjoe, Csaba Horváth, Pablo Martínez-Juárez, Karyn Morrissey, Conor Murphy, Richard A. Smith

2023AMBIO27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Adaptation strategies to ameliorate the impacts of climate change are increasing in scale and scope around the world, with interventions becoming a part of daily life for many people. Though the implications of climate impacts for health and wellbeing are well documented, to date, adaptations are largely evaluated by financial cost and their effectiveness in reducing risk. Looking across different forms of adaptation to floods, we use existing literature to develop a typology of key domains of impact arising from interventions that are likely to shape health and wellbeing. We suggest that this typology can be used to assess the health consequences of adaptation interventions more generally and argue that such forms of evaluation will better support the development of sustainable adaptation planning.

Topics & Concepts

TypologyAdaptation (eye)Psychological interventionScope (computer science)Scale (ratio)Flood mythClimate changeEnvironmental planningEnvironmental resource managementPsychologyGeographyEconomicsComputer scienceEcologyPsychiatryCartographyNeuroscienceBiologyProgramming languageArchaeologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementClimate Change, Adaptation, Migration