Abstract
Introduction: The objective of the study was to characterize subjective perception of environmental, climatic and anthropogenic health risk factors by indigenous and non-indigenous urban population of the Far North. Materials and methods: In summer–autumn 2019, we conducted a questionnaire-based survey (n=446) in two cities of the Russian Far North to establish the main features of public perception of environmental, climatic and anthropogenic health risk factors. Results: We established that one third of the respondents described northern climatic conditions as “severe” or “rather severe” without any marked differences in opinion between groups of respondents formed by criteria of age, sex, and nativity. The specific local features perceived as having the most adverse health effects included the polar night, atmospheric pressure and temperature fluctuations, and strong winds. A significantly more negative perception and harder adaptation to the climate of the Far North were typical of all women and non-indigenous people. They were also more persevering in self-preservation to minimize adverse health effects of the local factors and practiced compliance with daily living routines, diet control, vitamin intake, etc. Conclusions: We found that adverse climatic conditions, high levels of anthropogenic contamination in the northern urban areas, and the resulting worries about children’s health were the leading “push-out” factors of migration. Pronounced migration intentions were noted among both the locally born and bred people and the migrants. We also observed no significant differences between those groups in ranking the importance of climatic and anthropogenic factors in decision to leave.
Publisher
Federal Center for Hygiene and Epidemiology
Reference18 articles.
1. 1. Kalemeneva EA. Models of the Soviet North development in the 1950s: the case of Commission on Issues of the North. Sibirskie Istoricheskie Issledovaniya. 2018; (2):181-200. (In Russian). DOI: https://doi.org/10.17223/2312461X/20/10
2. 2. Pchelintsev OS, Shcherbakova EM, Nozdrina NN, et al. Socio-demographic processes in the North zone and tasks of state regulation. Demoskop Weekly. 2005; (209–210):12. (In Russian).
3. 3. Efremov IA. Present migration processes in the Far North of Russia. Regionologiya. 2016; (4(97)):140–159. (In Russian).
4. 4. Fauzer VV. Factors of migration of the northern regions’ population. Ekonomicheskie I Sotsial'nye Peremeny: Fakty, Tendentsii, Prognoz. 2010; (3(11)):138-144. (In Russian).
5. 5. Smirnov SN, Garsiya-Iser MKh. Migration from the Far North: intentions and opportunities of marginal population groups. Mir Rossii. Sotsiologiya. Etnologiya. 1998; 7(4):57-92. (In Russian).
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献