Climate change exacerbates the severity of natural disasters, which disproportionately affect vulnerable populations. Mitigating disasters’ health consequences is critical to promoting health equity, but few studies have isolated the short- and long-term effects of disasters on vulnerable groups. We filled this gap by conducting a fifteen-year (2003–2018) prospective study of low-income, predominantly Black parents who experienced Hurricane Katrina: the Resilience in Survivors of Katrina (RISK) Project. Here we describe this project and synthesize lessons from work that has resulted from it. Our findings can guide policy makers, service providers, and health officials in disaster planning and response. We synthesize them into an organizational schema of five priorities: Primary efforts should be aimed at preventing exposure to trauma through investments in climate resilience and by eliminating impediments to evacuation, health care policies should promote uninterrupted and expanded access to care, social services should integrate and strive to reduce the administrative burden on survivors, programs should aid survivors in forging or strengthening connections to their communities, and policy makers should fund targeted long-term services for highly affected survivors. (author abstract) #P4HEwebinarJune2024
Mitigating health disparities after natural disasters: Lessons from the RISK project
Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Raker, Ethan J.
Arcaya, Mariana C.
Lowe, Sarah R.
Zacher, Meghan
Rhodes, Jean
Waters, Mary C.
Publisher
Health Affairs
Date
December 2020
Abstract / Description
Copyright
Yes
Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Journal Article
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Mental/Behavioral Health
Social/Structural Determinants » Global Health » Disasters