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Drought-compounded stress and immune function in Kenyan pastoralist boys and girls occupying contrasting climate zones

  • Bilinda Straight
  • , Charles E. Hilton
  • , Charles Owuor Olungah
  • , Belinda L. Needham
  • , Erica Tyler
  • , Lora Iannotti
  • , Theodore Zava
  • , Melanie A. Martin
  • , Eleanor Brindle

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background and aim: We provide ethnographic, photovoice, and psychosocial stress data (food and water insecurity, potentially traumatic events, stress biomarkers) documenting the joys, hazards, and stressors of adolescents engaging in climate-sensitive pastoralist livelihoods in a global climate change hot spot. We aim to holistically capture socio-environmental relationships characterised by climate sensitive livelihoods and forms of precarity exacerbated by climate change. Subjects and methods: Qualitative and quantitative methods were integrated to understand the embodied toll of hazards that Samburu pastoralists faced based on a sample of 161 young people. Quantitatively, we tested for associations of psychosocial stressors with both psychological distress and cell-mediated immune function (assessed through differences in IgG antibodies to Epstein-Barr virus). Results: Qualitatively, young Samburu reported drought, food and water insecurity, wildlife encounters, and war exposure. Girls overall endorsed more posttraumatic stress symptoms, although boys reported relatively more stressors; girls overall and young people in the hotter subregion manifested more immune dysregulation. Conclusion: In spite of important differences between climate subregions, the common elements throughout the Samburu pastoralist leanscape include food and water insecurity and overall precarity exacerbated by drought and climate change. Community-driven interventions are needed to reduce precarity for young people pursuing pastoralist livelihoods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2455698
JournalAnnals of Human Biology
Volume52
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Adolescents
  • Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) antibodies
  • Kenya
  • climate stress

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