We are keen to share our research and collaborate and engage with the community.
Please get in touch with us via heal@canberra.edu.au or 02 6206 5131.
The unprecedented floods in New South Wales and Queensland in 2022 caused 23 deaths, large-scale community devastation, and disrupted health and other services and facilities. Deaths from drowning, injuries, poisonings and infections are typically the immediate health impacts of floods. However, these direct impacts are only the tip of the health iceberg. Flood‐affected communities in Australia and other parts of the world have experienced long‐lasting mental health effects, such as depression, anxiety and post‐traumatic stress disorder.
The HEAL Global Research Centre, in collaboration with the Mental Health Policy Unit and the Wellbeing and Resilience Unit, aim to strengthen resilience to floods, droughts, heatwaves, bushfires, and other climate disasters through proactive climate change adaptation in the health sector, and improved planning in the built and natural environment.
Project team: Sotiris Vardoulakis, Luis Salvador-Carulla, Jacki Schirmer and Ro McFarlane
Vardoulakis S., Matthews V., Bailie R., Hu W., Salvador-Carulla L., Barratt A., Chu C., 2022. Building resilience to Australian flood disasters in the face of climate change. Medical Journal of Australia 217 (7), 342-345. DOI:10.5694/mja2.51595
We are keen to share our research and collaborate and engage with the community.
Please get in touch with us via heal@canberra.edu.au or 02 6206 5131.
ϳԹ acknowledges the Ngunnawal people, traditional custodians of the lands where Bruce campus is situated. We wish to acknowledge and respect their continuing culture and the contribution they make to the life of Canberra and the region. We also acknowledge all other First Nations Peoples on whose lands we gather.