Since 9/11, federal funds directed toward public health departments for training in disaster preparedness have dramatically increased, resulting in changing expectations of public health workers’ roles in emergency response. This article explores the public health emergency responder role through data collected as part of an oral history conducted with the 3 health departments that responded to Hurricane Katrina in Mississippi and Louisiana. The data reveals a significant change in public health emergency response capacity as a result of federal funding. The role is still evolving, and many challenges remain, in particular, a clear articulation of the public health role in emergency response, the integration of the public health and emergen...
The purpose of this research was to better understand the impact of the terrorist attacks in 2001 on...
As Maureen McCue so aptly describes in this second issue of the International Journal of Global Heal...
Correspondence issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Sept...
Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast in late August 2005, causing catastrophic wind damage and f...
Katrina made landfall in southeast Louisiana on August 29, 2005 as a category four hurricane. This H...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the State of North Carolina responded to the disaster by deploying...
ObjectiveExaminations of the demands on public health workers after disaster exposure have been limi...
Reviews of state public health preparedness improvements have been primarily limited to measuring fu...
This paper was presented at DePaul University in March 2006, as part of a Symposium on Shaping a New...
CHDS State/LocalThis thesis focuses on the medical as part of the public health response to Hurrican...
Recent tragedies are causing hospitals to more intensively review their strategies and broaden their...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Environmental Health. Advisor: Debra...
In much of the recent thought devoted to the role of states in responding to catastrophic public hea...
Hurricane Katrina claimed over 1,500 lives, injured thousands more, and severely disrupted health-ca...
Some jurisdictions have reduced workforce and reallocated responsibilities for public health prepare...
The purpose of this research was to better understand the impact of the terrorist attacks in 2001 on...
As Maureen McCue so aptly describes in this second issue of the International Journal of Global Heal...
Correspondence issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Sept...
Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast in late August 2005, causing catastrophic wind damage and f...
Katrina made landfall in southeast Louisiana on August 29, 2005 as a category four hurricane. This H...
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the State of North Carolina responded to the disaster by deploying...
ObjectiveExaminations of the demands on public health workers after disaster exposure have been limi...
Reviews of state public health preparedness improvements have been primarily limited to measuring fu...
This paper was presented at DePaul University in March 2006, as part of a Symposium on Shaping a New...
CHDS State/LocalThis thesis focuses on the medical as part of the public health response to Hurrican...
Recent tragedies are causing hospitals to more intensively review their strategies and broaden their...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2012. Major: Environmental Health. Advisor: Debra...
In much of the recent thought devoted to the role of states in responding to catastrophic public hea...
Hurricane Katrina claimed over 1,500 lives, injured thousands more, and severely disrupted health-ca...
Some jurisdictions have reduced workforce and reallocated responsibilities for public health prepare...
The purpose of this research was to better understand the impact of the terrorist attacks in 2001 on...
As Maureen McCue so aptly describes in this second issue of the International Journal of Global Heal...
Correspondence issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Sept...