Abstract

BackgroundEcosystems are being degraded worldwide, reducing biodiversity and threatening human well-being. Especially in developing countries, rural and poor households often depend closely on natural capital for their livelihoods and health. However, the health consequences of ecosystem declines remain difficult to predict. Here, we report on two multicountry analysis to investigate general relationships between ecosystems and human health for these vulnerable populations. MethodsWe compiled a unique dataset covering about 300 000 children from more than 35 countries, by combining Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) with additional information about socioeconomic, climate, and environmental factors. We first examined the relationship between watershed conditions and diarrhoeal disease, a major cause of child malnutrition and mortality worldwide. In a second analysis, we then related forest cover more broadly to three health outcomes: diarrhoea, stunting, and anaemia. For both analyses, we used nested mixed-effects logit models to predict the probability of disease based on environmental variables as well as covariates representing climate, sanitation, education, and wealth. FindingsIn the first analysis, we find that more human activity upstream increases the probability of reported diarrhoea (model coefficient 0·10 [standard error (SE) 0·02]), and that higher tree cover upstream reduces it (–0·13 [0·04]). These effects are statistically significant for rural households (human activity: 0·11 [SE 0·03]; tree cover: −0·17 [0·05]), but not urban households (human activity: 0·07 [SE 0·04]; tree cover: −0·07 [0·06]), suggesting shifting dependences from natural to built capital. In the second analysis, we find that increased forest cover reduced the probabilities of all three diseases for the poorest segment of the population, but not for the wealthiest, again indicating differential dependencies on nature. InterpretationThese analyses provide evidence that intact ecosystems are associated with improved child health outcomes, especially for the most vulnerable populations. Under certain conditions, therefore, efforts to protect and restore ecosystems could be considered an important public health investment. FundingUS National Science Foundation National Socio-Environmental Synthesis Center (NSF DBI-1052875); Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; and Mava Foundation via the Luc Hoffmann Institute at WWF International.

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