COMMENTARIES Federal Health Policy Response to Hurricane Katrina What It Was and What It Could Have Been

ONE YEAR AGO, THE UNITED STATES EXPERIENCEDone of the worst natural disasters in its his-tory. Hurricane Katr ina caused wel l-documented, widespread death and destruc-tion, reducing hospital capacity by 80 % and safety-net clinics by 75 % in New Orleans alone.1 The hurricane also created a diaspora...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jeanne M. Lambrew, Donna E. Shalala
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.541.5449
http://cretscmhd.psych.ucla.edu/nola/volunteer/EmpiricalStudies/Federal health policy response to hurricane katrina - what it was and what it could have been.pdf
Description
Summary:ONE YEAR AGO, THE UNITED STATES EXPERIENCEDone of the worst natural disasters in its his-tory. Hurricane Katr ina caused wel l-documented, widespread death and destruc-tion, reducing hospital capacity by 80 % and safety-net clinics by 75 % in New Orleans alone.1 The hurricane also created a diaspora of more than a million evacuees to every state in the nation. This disaster could be viewed as an isolated event. Indeed, the hurricane destroyed infrastructure in states with low income and particularly high health care needs. Yet similar crises could occur in different and, unfortu-nately, likely circumstances. A major earthquake, avian flu epidemic, or bioterrorism attack could diminish health care capacity, cause displacement, and take a great toll on the nation’s health. Thus, the federal health policy response to Hurricane Katrina is not just history but a test of the sys-tem’s effectiveness.