Evaluating the impact of Hazelwood mine fire event on students’ educational development with Bayesian interrupted time-series hierarchical meta-regression

Author:

Gao Caroline X.ORCID,Broder Jonathan C.,Brilleman Sam,Campbell Timothy C. H.,Berger Emily,Ikin Jillian,Smith Catherine L.ORCID,Wolfe Rory,Johnston Fay,Guo Yuming,Carroll Matthew

Abstract

BackgroundEnvironmental disasters such as wildfires, floods and droughts can introduce significant interruptions and trauma to impacted communities. Children and young people can be disproportionately affected with additional educational disruptions. However, evaluating the impact of disasters is challenging due to difficulties in establishing studies and recruitment post-disasters.ObjectivesWe aimed to (1) develop a Bayesian model using aggregated school-level data to evaluate the impact of environmental disasters on academic achievement and (2) evaluate the impact of the 2014 Hazelwood mine fire (a six-week fire event in Australia).MethodsBayesian hierarchical meta-regression was developed to evaluate the impact of the mine fire using easily accessible aggregated school-level data from the standardised National Assessment Program-Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) test. NAPLAN results and school characteristics (2008–2018) from 69 primary/secondary schools with different levels of mine fire-related smoke exposure were used to estimate the impact of the event. Using an interrupted time series design, the model estimated immediate effects and post-interruption trend differences with full Bayesian statistical inference.ResultsMajor academic interruptions across NAPLAN domains were evident in high exposure schools in the year post-mine fire (greatest interruption in Writing: 11.09 [95%CI: 3.16–18.93], lowest interruption in Reading: 8.34 [95%CI: 1.07–15.51]). The interruption was comparable to a four to a five-month delay in educational attainment and had not fully recovered after several years.ConclusionConsiderable academic delays were found as a result of a mine fire, highlighting the need to provide educational and community-based supports in response to future events. Importantly, this work provides a statistical method using readily available aggregated data to assess the educational impacts in response to other environmental disasters.

Funder

Department of Health, State Government of Victoria

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference95 articles.

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3. 60,000 disaster victims speak: Part I. An empirical review of the empirical literature, 1981–2001;FH Norris;Psychiatry,2002

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