Miracle Get Journal
Vol 3 No 1 (2026): February, 2026

The Relationship between Emergency Sanitation Access and Post-Disaster Environmentally Based Disease Incidences

Sari, Mila (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
31 Mar 2026

Abstract

Natural disasters often cause serious disruptions to clean water and sanitation systems, which directly impacts the increased risk of environmentally-related diseases in affected communities. Emergency sanitation is a key component of post-disaster health responses, but its availability and quality vary widely across evacuation sites. This study aims to analyze the relationship between emergency sanitation access and the incidence of environmentally-related diseases in communities living in post-disaster evacuation sites. The study used an observational analytical design with a cross-sectional approach and involved 210 adult respondents in evacuation sites in disaster-prone areas in Indonesia. Data were collected through structured interviews and observations of ion conditions, then analyzed using the Chi-Square test and logistic regression. The results showed that 60.0% of respondents lived in environments with inadequate emergency sanitation access and 41.0% of households reported incidences of environmentally-related diseases. There was a significant relationship between emergency sanitation access and disease incidence (p = 0.001), with respondents with inadequate sanitation having a higher risk of disease. Multivariate analysis showed that inadequate emergency sanitation was the dominant factor (OR = 2.98; 95% CI: 1.63–5.44), followed by overcrowding and hygiene practices. This study concluded that providing adequate and timely emergency sanitation is a priority intervention to reduce the burden of disease and improve community health resilience in post-disaster situations.

Copyrights © 2026






Journal Info

Abbrev

miracle

Publisher

Subject

Public Health

Description

Miracle Get Journal is an open access and peer-reviewed journal. It refers to the word "MIRACLE" which stands for Manager, Innovator, Researcher, Apprenticer, Communitarian, Leader, and Educator. These components have important roles and functions required in the field of Public Health. Through ...