Author
Listed:
- Kyra Lilier
- Sarah L Dalglish
- Mark Donald C Reñosa
- Samiya A Selim
- Syed Tauheed Raihan
- Rafia Islam
- Jennifer Das
- Ina Danquah
- Rainer Sauerborn
- Kate Bärnighausen
Abstract
Purpose: Climate change is the greatest global health threat of the 21st century, but little is known about well-being in climate vulnerable populations. We investigate how well-being is shaped by common and unique stressors in an area of climate vulnerability in Bangladesh. Methods: We present findings from 60 semi-structured in-depth interviews. We inductively analyzed our data following a Reflexive Thematic Analysis approach and then applied a Relational Well-being (RWB) framework. Results: We found that well-being was influenced negatively by factors such as financial worries, forced migration, social pressure, and natural disasters. Well-being was influenced positively by factors such as financial satisfaction, voluntary migration, social support, and place attachment. Conclusions: Using relational well-being as a conceptual lens allowed us to explore the dynamism and complexity of factors shaping well-being that were partly specific to the local context and partly rooted in wider societal and global structures. Policies which aim to improve the well-being of climate vulnerable populations should consider relational well-being as a conceptual tool to leverage locally available informal resources, such as suppotive reciprocal relationships.
Suggested Citation
Kyra Lilier & Sarah L Dalglish & Mark Donald C Reñosa & Samiya A Selim & Syed Tauheed Raihan & Rafia Islam & Jennifer Das & Ina Danquah & Rainer Sauerborn & Kate Bärnighausen, 2025.
"The “most beautiful place” where “it’s not possible to live”: A qualitative study of relational well-being in an area of climate vulnerability, Bangladesh,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 20(9), pages 1-20, September.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0325972
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325972
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