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Rainfall variability and adverse birth outcomes in Amazonia

Erick A. Chacón-Montalván, Benjamin M. Taylor, Marcelo G. Cunha, Gemma Davies, Jesem D. Y. Orellana and Luke Parry ()
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Erick A. Chacón-Montalván: Lancaster University
Benjamin M. Taylor: Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation
Marcelo G. Cunha: Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
Gemma Davies: Lancaster University
Jesem D. Y. Orellana: Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
Luke Parry: Lancaster University

Nature Sustainability, 2021, vol. 4, issue 7, 583-594

Abstract: Abstract Amazonian populations are increasingly exposed to climatic shocks, yet knowledge of related health impacts is limited. Understanding how health risks are coproduced by local climatic variability, place and social inequities is vital for improving decision-making, particularly in decentralized contexts. We assess the impacts of rainfall variability and multiscale vulnerabilities on birth weight, which has lifelong health consequences. We focus on highly river-dependent areas in Amazonia, using urban and rural birth registrations during 2006–2017. We find a strong but spatially differentiated relationship between local rainfall and subsequent river-level anomalies. Using Bayesian models, we disentangle the impacts of rainfall shocks of different magnitudes, municipal characteristics, social inequities and seasonality. Prenatal exposure to extremely intense rainfall is associated with preterm birth, restricted intra-uterine growth and lower mean birth weight (≤−183 g). Adverse birth outcomes also follow non-extreme intense rainfall (40% higher odds of low birth weight), drier conditions than seasonal averages (−39 g mean birth weight) and conception in the rising-water season (−13 g mean birth weight). Babies experience penalties totalling 646 g when born to adolescent, Amerindian, unmarried mothers that received no formal education or antenatal or obstetric health care. Rainfall variability confers intergenerational disadvantage, especially for socially marginalized Amazonians in forgotten places. Structural changes are required to reduce inequities, foster citizen empowerment and improve the social accountability of public institutions.

Date: 2021
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DOI: 10.1038/s41893-021-00684-9

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