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Unleashing the power of emergency response: controlling natural disasters by addressing environmental risk.

Yue LiJunfeng ZhangSana Ullah
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2023)
The primary focus of the analysis is to investigate the impact of emergency response management and environmental risk on natural disasters by controlling the variables of national income and financial development. To investigate the model empirically, we have employed the quantile autoregressive distributed lag model that estimates the short- and long-run estimates across various quantiles. The long-run estimates of emergency response management are negative and significant only at higher quantiles, i.e., from 60 to 95th quantiles. In the short run, emergency response management's estimated coefficients are negative and significant from 70 to 95th quantiles. Environmental risk shows a significant positive correlation with natural disasters across quantiles, while national income and financial development decrease natural disasters in the long run. Furthermore, we observed the asymmetric impact of emergency response management on natural disasters in both the short and long run.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • young adults
  • risk assessment
  • emergency medical
  • climate change
  • childhood cancer