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February 23, 2006
Initial Health Policy Responses to Hurricane Katrina and Possible Next Steps

Initial Health Policy Responses to Hurricane Katrina and Possible Next Steps


News coverage of the overcrowded Superdome and the city's flooded streets exposed the poverty and vulnerability of many residents, especially African Americans.

As New Orleans begins to rebuild, can the city avoid the mistakes of the past, instead creating more effective social support for low-income and minority residents?

This essay is from an Urban Institute collection that addresses employment, affordable housing, public schools, young children's needs, health care, arts and culture, and vulnerable populations.

All these essays assess the challenges facing New Orleans today and for years to come and recommend tested models for making the city's social infrastructure stronger and more equitable than it was before Katrina.

Hurricane Katrina destroyed much of the New Orleans health care system.

With more than a dozen hospitals damaged and thousands of doctors dislocated, virtually all New Orleanians lost access to their usual health care providers.

The devastation of New Orleans' health care system was especially profound for the low-income uninsured, most of whom depend heavily on a handful of providers, especially Charity Hospital, one of the nation's oldest health facilities dedicated to treating the poor and disadvantaged.

Although the immediate crisis has subsided, state and national officials, employers, and insurers must confront a wide array of difficult health care challenges in Katrina's aftermath.

Posted on February 23, 2006 03:02 PM



Human Services
Headlines


Certain skills are predictors of reading ability in young children

Ability to quit smoking may depend on ADHD symptoms, Columbia researchers find

Racialized communication met with silence in the classroom

Study suggests attending religious services sharply cuts risk of death

Exploring the health and protective benefits of light to moderate alcohol consumption

Pregnant women who do aquarobics have easier deliveries


More Human Services News »
Key Human Services Sites

Center for Budget and Policy Priorities
Center on Law and Social Policy
National Center for Children in Poverty
Urban Institute
Food Research and Action Center

Department of Human Services
HandsNet - EITC Resources

More HandsNet Resources

 


Grassroots & Groundwork: What Communities are Doing to Get Out and Stay Out of Poverty

The Role of Medicaid and SCHIP as an Insurance Safety Net

An Overview of Selected Data on Children in Vulnerable Families

Anti-Poverty Practitioners Gear Up for Orlando Convention After Hurricane Katrina Shuts Down Their 2005 Meeting


 
Since launching the first online network for activists in 1987, HandsNet has aggregated current human services and community development information important to low-income communities and communities of color. We seek to foster comprehensive thinking on approaches to improving the lives of people living in these communities.
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