| Literature DB >> 20508756 |
J Sullivan1, B Parras, R St Marie, W Subra, S Petronella, J Gorenstein, R Fuchs-Young, R K Santa, A Chavarria, J Ward, P Diamond.
Abstract
In response to the human health threats stemming from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, inter-disciplinary working groups representing P30-funded Centers of the National Institute Environmental Health Sciences were created to assess threats posed by mold, harmful alga blooms, chemical toxicants, and various infectious agents at selected sites throughout the hurricane impact zone. Because of proximity to impacted areas, UTMB NIEHS Center in Environmental Toxicology was charged with coordinating direct community outreach efforts, primarily in south Louisiana. In early October 2005, UTMB/NIEHS Center Community Outreach and Education Core, in collaboration with outreach counterparts at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center @ Smithville TX/Center for Research in Environmental Disease sent two groups into southern Louisiana. One group used Lafourche Parish as a base to deliver humanitarian aid and assess local needs for additional supplies during local recovery/reclamation. A second group, ranging through New Iberia, New Orleans, Chalmette, rural Terrebonne, Lafourche and Jefferson Parishes and Baton Rouge met with community environmental leaders, emergency personnel and local citizens to 1) sample public risk perceptions, 2) evaluate the scope and reach of ongoing risk communication efforts, and 3) determine how the NIEHS could best collaborate with local groups in environmental health research and local capacity building efforts. This scoping survey identified specific information gaps limiting efficacy of risk communication, produced a community "wish list" of potential collaborative research projects. The project provided useful heuristics for disaster response and management planning and a platform for future collaborative efforts in environmental health assessment and risk communication with local advocacy groups in south Terrebonne-Lafourche parishes.Entities:
Keywords: CBPR; NIEHS; disaster management; environmental justice; exposure pathway; local knowledge; project CEHRO; risk communication; risk perception
Year: 2009 PMID: 20508756 PMCID: PMC2872570 DOI: 10.4137/ehi.s2158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Insights ISSN: 1178-6302
Figure 1.Distribution of Petro. Exploration/Production Sites: Maps of refineries, oil/gas wells, gas stations, petroleum storage stations, extraction sites.1
Figure 2.Potential Exposure Hazards: Map of National Priority List (NPL Superfund) sites, TRI reporting facilities, surface water intakes and HAZMAT sites.1
Ecological/social damage assessment, risk perceptions, environmental collaborations interview items.
What significant damage did your area sustain during or because of Hurricane Katrina and/or Rita? What are the most significant threats to human health in your area, post-Katrina (or Rita)? How has the hurricane evacuation, reentry and recovery process disrupted the social fabric of your area, and Louisiana, generally? What environmental health projects—involving collaborations among environmental scientists, health care and social service providers, and communities—do you think are most important to safeguard the health of people and the environment in your area, your region, your state? Describe your organization’s response to this disaster. How have you modified your mission to make a effective response? How have these modifications affected your org’s capacity to realize your original mission? (Applicable only in interviews with directors/members of environmental orgs.) |
Perceived short term/long term environmental health risks.
exposure to mold: concentrations, direct exposure effects, possible immuno-suppression and recommended precautions massive loss of marsh and wetlands, loss of marshland’s hurricane dampening effect water potability during and immediately post-disaster levels of heavy metals, diesel and hydrocarbon residues in desiccated sludge; change in levels over time respiratory and other health effects of wind-borne sludge dust ( transport of petrochemical toxicants and metal residues moved by storm surges effects of damage to coastal marsh on subsistence food supply and health of the estuarine eco-system depression, disorientation, post-traumatic stress effects of disaster effects of disaster stressors on the most vulnerable segments of the population: children, the elderly, disabled individuals post-Katrina viability of drinking water treatment facilities extent of threat from pathogens in water; ongoing monitoring of pathogen levels in bayou surface water and major bodies such as Lake Pontchartrain; rashes and lesions as consequence of immersion in flood water dispersion patterns and health effects of toxic releases from submerged automobiles, agricultural chemicals, non-petrochemical industrial sites viability and potential virulence of pathogens in desiccated sludge integrity of superfund sites and brown fields after wind damage and submergence; effects on prior capping or other abatement remedies flooding/overflow risk to surface water from RCRA-exempt waste pits and compromised sewage treatment facilities post wind and storm-surge integrity of petrochemical facilities; direct damage to physical plants emissions and flaring during post-storm petrochemical shutdown-restart process; regulatory waivers on un-permitted emissions during start-up process debris issues: collection, transportation, certified and marginal disposal sites, use of air curtain destructors to contain emissions from incineration process need for specific reentry safety gear not clearly indicated; lack of information on reentry procedures; safety equipment unavailable; price gouging mosquitoes, animal and/or human corpses, diseased animals as contagious disease vectors location of “permanently temporary” FEMA-villes proximate to point sources of air toxics or waste disposal areas permanent reconfiguration of regional political demographic with consequent effects on redevelopment policy and environmental justice issues |
Katrina/rita community research collaboration environmental health and safety “wish list”.
Monitoring health outcomes using combination biomarker assay and health effects survey with rescue and recovery workers. Differentiation of acute/chronic health effects in recovery workers based on time period of response, length of time working in impact area, proximity to documented environmental impact areas, occupational category etc. This monitoring could also be extended to ALL residents re-entering affected areas. Systematic bio monitoring of vulnerable populations returning to high impact areas. Results used to develop individual clinical intervention plans where applicable and track overall population health. Development of a comprehensive—but simultaneously site-specific—disaster management plan and procedures that incorporate statewide environmental risk communication, and hazard preparation training for community-based environmental organizations. Monitoring infiltration of potable water supplies (with emphasis on bayou supplied communities) by petrochemical releases, effluents and waste disposal site residues. Monitoring equipment would remain on-site, on-line with opportunities for continuous data feed and future emergency response measurements. Multi-agency efforts to create an inter-coastal and marshland reclamation waterway policy that sustains industrial economy while preventing further salt water infiltration of marshlands and restores essential storm buffering. Public Forums on waste disposal efforts to address hazardous and non-hazardous debris removal, storage/sequestration, and/or incineration. Occupational risk survey of Latino workers (documented and undocumented) to establish pre-exposure baselines (as possible), exposure pathways and levels of exposure as consequences of recovery employment. |
Risk assessment-perceptions, environmental collaborations survey.
What significant damage did your area sustain during or because of Hurricane Katrina and/or Rita? What is the most significant threat to human health in your area, post-Katrina (or Rita)? How has the hurricane evacuation, reentry and recovery process disrupted the social fabric of your area, and Louisiana, generally? What environmental health projects—involving collaborations among environmental scientists, health care and social service providers, and communities—do you think are most important to safeguard the health of people and the environment in your area, your region, your state? Describe your organization’s response to this disaster. How have you modified your mission to make a effective response? How have these modifications affected your org’s capacity to realize your original mission? (Applicable only in interviews with members of environmental orgs.) |
Perceived short term/long term environmental health risks.
exposure to mold: concentrations, direct exposure effects, possible immuno-suppression and recommended precautions massive loss of marsh and wetlands, loss of marshland’s hurricane dampening effect water potability during and immediately post-disaster levels of heavy metals, diesel and hydrocarbon residues in desiccated sludge; change in levels over time respiratory and other health effects of wind-borne sludge dust ( transport of petrochemical toxicants and metal residues moved by storm surges effects of damage to coastal marsh on subsistence food supply and health of the estuarine eco-system depression, disorientation, post-traumatic stress effects of disaster effects of disaster stressors on the most vulnerable segments of the population: children, the elderly, disabled individuals post-Katrina viability of drinking water treatment facilities extent of threat from pathogens in water; ongoing monitoring of pathogen levels in bayou surface water and major bodies such as Lake Pontchartrain; rashes and lesions as consequence of immersion in flood water dispersion patterns and health effects of toxic releases from submerged automobiles, agricultural chemicals, non-petrochemical industrial sites viability and potential virulence of pathogens in desiccated sludge integrity of superfund sites and brown fields after wind damage and submergence; effects on prior capping or other abatement remedies flooding/overflow risk to surface water from RCRA-exempt waste pits and compromised sewage treatment facilities post wind and storm-surge integrity of petrochemical facilities; direct damage to physical plants emissions and flaring during post-storm petrochemical shutdown-restart process; regulatory waivers on un-permitted emissions during start-up process debris issues: collection, transportation, certified and marginal disposal sites, use of air curtain destructors to contain emissions from incineration process need for specific reentry safety gear not clearly indicated; lack of information on reentry procedures; safety equipment unavailable; price gouging mosquitoes, animal and/or human corpses, diseased animals as contagious disease vectors location of “permanently temporary” FEMA-villes proximate to point sources of air toxics or waste disposal areas permanent reconfiguration of regional political demographic with consequent effects on redevelopment policy and environmental justice issues |
Katrina/Rita community research “Wish List”.
Monitoring health outcomes using combination biomarker assay and health effects survey with rescue and recovery workers. Differentiation of acute/chronic health effects in recovery workers based on time period of response, length of time working in impact area, proximity to documented environmental impact areas, occupational category etc. This monitoring could also be extended to ALL residents re-entering affected areas. Systematic bio monitoring of vulnerable populations returning to high impact areas. Results used to develop individual clinical intervention plans where applicable and track overall population health. Development of a comprehensive—but simultaneously site-specific—disaster management plan and procedures that incorporate statewide environmental risk communication, and hazard preparation training for community-based environmental organizations. Monitoring infiltration of potable water supplies (with emphasis on bayou supplied communities) by petrochemical releases, effluents and waste disposal site residues. Monitoring equipment would remain on-site, on-line with opportunities for continuous data feed and future emergency response measurements. Multi-agency efforts to create an inter-coastal and marshland reclamation waterway policy that sustains industrial economy while preventing further salt water infiltration of marshlands and restores essential storm buffering. Public Forums on waste disposal efforts to address hazardous and non-hazardous debris removal, storage/sequestration, and/or incineration. Occupational risk survey of Latino workers (documented and undocumented) to establish pre-exposure baselines (as possible), exposure pathways and levels of exposure as consequences of recovery employment. |
“Public talks science listens…” project timeline.
| October 8th–25th (2005) | UTMB NIEHS COEC/MD Anderson-UT/Smithville CRED(2005) deploys outreach teams in South Louisiana |
| October 31st–November 1st (2005) | Presentation of interview results at NIEHS Center Directors Meeting by Pam Diamond, UTMB/NIEHS COEC Director; VanderBilt University; Nashville TN |
| April 14 (2006) | Hurricane Readiness Pilot Project funded through National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences Center in Environmental Toxicology@UTMB (ES006676) |
| May–August (2006) | Curriculum/Logistical planning with community partners in Terrebonne/Lafourche Parishes, Louisiana |
| September 8th–12th (2006) | Rollout of Project CEHRO (Community Environmental Health and Risk Outreach) in Gray, Houma (Terrebonne), and Galliano (Lafourche) |
| March 17th–18th (2007) | Supplemental workshop reflecting evolution of EPA risk assessment and recovery facts on the ground, Chauvin (Terrebonne) |
| March 31st (2007) | End of project funding period |
“Public talks science listens…” project timeline.
| October 8th–25th (2005) | UTMB NIEHS COEC/MD Anderson-UT/Smithville CRED(2005) deploys outreach teams in South Louisiana |
| October 31st–November 1st (2005) | Presentation of interview results at NIEHS Center Directors Meeting by Pam Diamond, UTMB/NIEHS COEC Director; VanderBilt University; Nashville TN |
| April 14 (2006) | Hurricane Readiness Pilot Project funded through National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences Center in Environmental Toxicology@UTMB (ES006676) |
| May–August (2006) | Curriculum/Logistical planning with community partners in Terrebonne/Lafourche Parishes, Louisiana |
| September 8th–12th (2006) | Rollout of Project CEHRO (Community Environmental Health and Risk Outreach) in Gray, Houma (Terrebonne), and Galliano (Lafourche) |
| March 17th–18th (2007) | Supplemental workshop reflecting evolution of EPA risk assessment and recovery facts on the ground, Chauvin (Terrebonne) |
| March 31st (2007) | End of project funding period |