Disaster Mythology and Fact: Hurricane Katrina and Social Attachment

Author:

Jacob Binu1,Mawson Anthony R.2,Marinelle Payton3,Guignard John C.4

Affiliation:

1. Center for Health Protection, Arkansas Department of Health, Little Rock, AR

2. Division of Genetics and Epidemiology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS

3. College of Public Service, Jackson State University, Jackson, MS

4. Guignard Biodynamics, Metairie, LA

Abstract

Misconceptions about disasters and their social and health consequences remain prevalent despite considerable research evidence to the contrary. Eight such myths and their factual counterparts were reviewed in a classic report on the public health impact of disasters by Claude de Ville de Goyet entitled, The Role of WHO in Disaster Management: Relief, Rehabilitation, and Reconstruction (Geneva, World Health Organization, 1991), and two additional myths and facts were added by Pan American Health Organization. In this article, we reconsider these myths and facts in relation to Hurricane Katrina, with particular emphasis on psychosocial needs and behaviors, based on data gleaned from scientific sources as well as printed and electronic media reports. The review suggests that preparedness plans for disasters involving forced mass evacuation and resettlement should place a high priority on keeping families together—and even entire neighborhoods, where possible—so as to preserve the familiar and thereby minimize the adverse effects of separation and major dislocation on mental and physical health.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference55 articles.

1. de Ville de Goyet C. The role of WHO in disaster management: Relief, rehabilitation, and reconstruction. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1991. Also available from: URL: http://www.crid.or.cr/digitalizacion/pdf/eng/doc10525/doc10525.htm [cited 2008 Jan 8].

2. Noji EK. The public health consequences of disasters. New York: Oxford University Press; 1997. p. 17–8.

3. Reconstruction of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina: A research perspective

4. Understanding Mass Panic and Other Collective Responses to Threat and Disaster

5. Mawson AR. Mass panic and social attachment: The dynamics of human behavior. Brookfield (VT): Ashgate Publishers; 2007.

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