| Literature DB >> 19151433 |
Abstract
The South East Asian Tsunami in Thailand and Hurricane Katrina in the United States were natural disasters of different origin but of similar destruction and response. Both disasters exhibited synonymous health outcomes and similar structural damage from large surges of water, waves, and flooding. A systematic discussion and comparison of the disasters in Thailand and the Gulf Coast considers both calamities to be similar types of disaster in different coastal locations. Thus valuable comparisons can be made for improvements in response, preparedness and mitigation. Research needs are discussed and recommendations made regarding potential methologies. Recommendations are made to: (1) improve disaster response time in terms of needs assessments for public health and environmental data collection; (2) develop an access-oriented data sharing policy; and (3) prioritize natural geomorphic structures such as barrier islands, mangroves, and wetlands to help reduce the scale of future natural disasters. Based on the experiences gained opportunities to enhance disaster preparedness through research are presented.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19151433 PMCID: PMC3699998 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph5050384
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
A Summary of General Disaster Impact Areas
| Damage | Tsunami (10 meter waves) | Levee overtopping/breaching-standing water | Hurricane surge (10 meter) |
| Needs Assessments CDC/MMWR | Rapid (12 days and sooner) | Slow (46 days) | Moderate (18 days) |
| Health | Some Diarrhea Isolated | Some cases of | |
| Environmental Data Collection | Government groups: Not made public. | Various groups: Not immediately available to public. Varying interpretation | EPA, MSDEQ, MSDH and others. Immediately available. |
General Disaster Impact Areas - Environmental Issues
| Wells/ reservoirs contaminated with salt water, sediment and animal/human corpses | Central water and wastewater facilities impaired. FEMA taskforce assigned to mitigate issues | 26 wastewater facilities affected – infrastructure, electrical problems |
| Six weeks after storm all water / wastewater facilities operational | ||
| Imported water; dual supply membrane treatment for drinking water / food preparation | Water treatment impaired. Boil water alert | Water treatment impaired. Boil water alert |
| Super-chlorination. | Imported water | |
| Low water pressure | Membrane treatment | |
| Population relocated to temporary camps | Well testing / disinfection by MSDH; EPA / FLA mobile labs | |
| Mold problems; mosquito larvicide spraying | Mold concerns less than NOLA; mosquito larvicide spraying | |
| Mold not an issue; mosquito larvicide spraying | Debris collection / disposal concerns | Debris collection disposal concerns |
Figure 1:Selected photos of hurricane Katrina in the Gulf Coast areas of the United States of America