نتایج جستجو برای: katrina

تعداد نتایج: 1578  

Journal: :Disasters 2017
Francis O Adeola J Steven Picou

Claims of environmental injustice, human neglect, and racism dominated the popular and academic literature after Hurricane Katrina struck the United States in August 2005. A systematic analysis of environmental injustice from the perspective of the survivors remains scanty or nonexistent. This paper presents, therefore, a systematic empirical analysis of the key determinants of Katrina-induced ...

Journal: :The American psychologist 2007
Anahita Gheytanchi Lisa Joseph Elaine Gierlach Satoko Kimpara Jennifer Housley Zeno E Franco Larry E Beutler

This comprehensive analysis addresses the United States' alarming lack of preparedness to respond effectively to a massive disaster as evidenced by Hurricane Katrina. First, a timeline of problematic response events during and after Hurricane Katrina orients readers to some of the specific problems encountered at different levels of government. Second, a list of the "Dirty Dozen"--12 major fail...

Journal: :The American journal of orthopsychiatry 2010
Jean Rhodes Christian Chan Christina Paxson Cecilia Elena Rouse Mary Waters Elizabeth Fussell

The purpose of this study was to document changes in mental and physical health among 392 low-income parents exposed to Hurricane Katrina and to explore how hurricane-related stressors and loss relate to post-Katrina well-being. The prevalence of probable serious mental illness doubled, and nearly half of the respondents exhibited probable posttraumatic stress disorder. Higher levels of hurrica...

Journal: :Journal of black studies 2010
Farrah D Gafford

The devastation of Hurricane Katrina unveiled the legacy of racial and class stratification in New Orleans, Louisiana. Much of the Katrina-related research has focused primarily on how poor Black neighborhoods were disproportionately affected by the disaster. While this body of research makes valid claims, there has been very little research that examines how Black middle-class residents in New...

2013
Cynthia Nikolai Michael Prietula Gregory Madey Irma Becerra-Fernandez Troy Johnson Matthew Mooney Rahul Bhandari

Hurricane Katrina was one of the most expensive and devastating natural disasters in American history. Over half a million people were affected by the hurricane, and the US energy infrastructure was severely damaged. In fact, parts of the Gulf are still recovering from Hurricane Katrina to this day. Hurricane Katrina and other natural disasters clearly show the need for improvements in crisis m...

Journal: :Disasters 2008
Jacqueline Warren Mills Andrew Curtis John C Pine Barrett Kennedy Farrell Jones Ramesh Ramani Douglas Bausch

The disaster clearinghouse concept originates with the earthquake community as an effort to coordinate research and data collection activities. Though prior earthquake clearinghouses are small in comparison to what was needed in response to Hurricane Katrina, these seminal structures are germane to the establishment of our current model. On 3 September 2005, five days after Katrina wrought cata...

Journal: :Journal of traumatic stress 2008
Sandro Galea Melissa Tracy Fran Norris Scott F Coffey

Hurricane Katrina was the most devastating natural disaster to hit the United States in the past 75 years. The authors conducted interviews of 810 persons who were representative of adult residents living in the 23 southernmost counties of Mississippi before Hurricane Katrina. The prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) since Hurricane Katrina was 22.5%. The determinants of PTSD were...

Journal: :Disasters 2012
Lee M Miller

Classic sociological theory can be used to interpret the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall in the United States on 29 August 2005. The delayed and ineffective response to the storm and the subsequent failure of the levees become more understandable when one considers the latent goals of social control in disaster recovery. Constructing the survivors as suspect or criminal and ...

2006
Cherie Castellano

Two distinct fields, crisis intervention (which targets civilian populations) and disaster mental health services (which targets first responders), have emerged in response to natural and man-made disasters. As a consequence of 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina, questions have been raised whether the occupational ecology of first responders has significantly changed. Two new concepts, the ‘‘high-risk ...

Journal: :Environmental Health Perspectives 2006

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