Asher Y. RosingerKelly Ochs RosingerKaitlyn BarnhartMadeleine ToddTate HamiltonKaterine Arias CuellarDino Nate2026-03-222026-03-22202210.1002/ajhb.23806https://doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.23806https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/45889Citaciones: 13Water insecurity and BP improved during the recovery process, while high levels of food insecurity persisted, and nutritional stress and respiratory illness worsened. Not all indicators of well-being and health recover at the same rate after historic flooding events. Planning for multiphase recovery is critical to improve health of marginalized populations after flooding.enFood insecurityFlood mythOddsEnvironmental healthMedicineLogistic regressionDemographyWaistFlooding (psychology)PovertyWhen the flood passes, does health return? A short panel examining water and food insecurity, nutrition, and disease after an extreme flood in lowland Boliviaarticle