Reaching Vulnerable Populations During a Public Health Emergency

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Slide # Title & Content
1 Reaching Vulnerable Populations During a Public Health Emergency
National Prevention Summit
October 27, 2006

Karen B. DeSalvo, MD, MPH, MSc
Tulane University
University Presidential Advisor for Public Medical Services
Executive Director, Tulane Community Health Center at Covenant House

2 Overview

  • What happened in New Orleans after Katrina regarding the care of vulnerable populations?
  • What are lessons learned from that experience and recommendations?
3 Pre-Storm Vulnerable Population

  • As seen on TV
  • 49th or 50th on UnitedHealthFoundation rankings for the past 6 years
  • 20% of the population uninsured
  • 250,000 vulnerable
4 Safety Net Pre-Storm

  • Centralized Charity Hospital System
    • State run
    • Hospital based clinics
    • Staffed by Tulane and LSU faculty and residents
  • Antiquated systems without patient linkage to primary care physicians and without EHR
5 Defining Vulnerable

  • Traditional
    • Poor
    • Women-headed households
    • Elderly
    • Homeless
    • Severely mentally ill
    • Immigrants

Morrow, Disasters, 1999

6 Special Issues

  • Burden of chronic illness
    • Poor control
    • Multiple medications
  • Lower literacy
  • Social support weaker
  • Less financial reserves
  • Lack of medical home

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Health alert network
http://www.phppo.cdc.gov/HAN/ArchiveSys/ViewMsgV.asp?AlertNum=00233;
DeSalvo, JGIM, 2005; www.statehealthfacts.org; Greenough, NEJM, 2005

7

(image: satellite photos of New Orleans before and after Katrina)

8

(image: photo of flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina)

9 Post-Storm Reality

  • Doctors without hospitals or clinics
  • Patients without doctors
  • Public resources focused on shelters and the displaced
  • In the city
    • First responders
    • Citizens who stayed behind
      • Vulnerable populations
    • Day-trippers

Niyogi, et al, AJMS, 2006 in press

10 Reality

  • In a disaster, everyone is vulnerable
    • 200,000 homes destroyed
    • Loss of social networks
    • Unemployment and loss of insurance
  • All providers become the safety net
11

(image: photo of post-Katrina flooding damage)

12

(image: photo of post-Katrina flooding damage)

13

(image: photo of post-Katrina flooding damage)

14 Providing Care

  • On the fly
  • Uncoordinated silos
  • Unavailable medical information
  • Broad scope of needs
    • Urgent
    • Chronic disease
    • Mental health
    • Educational
15 Solution

  • Flexibility
  • Makeshift system
  • Borrowed resources
    • Private
    • Local governmental
    • Federal
  • Ask forgiveness not permission
16

(image: photo of Clinic hand made sign located outside of Tulane University Square)

17

(image: photo of New Orleans area hospital)

18 "9 o'clock Meeting"

(image: photo of military planning session. DeSalvo, et al, Health Affairs, 2006)

19 USNS Comfort-Temporary Charity

(image: photo of U.S. Navy Hospital Ship, USNS Comfort)

20 Temporary Ambulatory Settings

(image: 4 photos of Temporary Ambulatory Settings)

21 Considerations for a Makeshift System

  • Safety
  • Site
  • Staff
  • Supplies
  • Storage
  • Scope of services
  • Standard of care
22

(image: photo of make-shift medical clinic in New Orleans. DeSalvo, Annals, 2005)

23

(image: photo of medical staff consulting patient)

24

(image: photo of doctor consulting elderly patient)

25 Goals in a Natural Disaster

  • Mitigate disease, suffering, and death
  • Sustain infrastructure, the economy, and societal functioning

Homeland Security Council: National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/homeland/nspi.pdf

26 Lesson Learned

  • Exposed
    • Weakness in our public health infrastructure
    • Problems with a centralized health care system
    • Complications of fragmented health system
    • Lack of systems to coordinate and communicate with clinicians
    • Need for regional coordination for persons with chronic disease

Greenough, NEJM, 2005; DeSalvo, ASIM, 2006; Redliner, Pediatrics, 2006

27 Changed Strategy

  • All Hazards Planning
    • Communication, redundancy, systems
    • Worst case scenario
  • Public private partnerships
  • Legal documents in place to allow partnerships
  • Partnerships between medical and social services sectors
  • Regional care networks
28

(image: map of New Orleans area titled "Health Services in Greater New Orleans, New Orleans Health Department, Current as of 10-27-05")

29 Flexible Delivery

(image: photo of mobile healthcare vehicle)

30 Local Providers

(image: photo of health care providers in New Orleans)

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