Scrambling for safety in the eye of dorian: Mental health consequences of exposure to a climate-driven hurricane

  • James M. Shultz
  • , Duane E. Sands
  • , Nadia Holder-Hamilton
  • , William Hamilton
  • , Sandeep Goud
  • , Krista Marie Nottage
  • , Zelde Espinel
  • , Stephanie Friedman
  • , Craig Fugate
  • , James P. Kossin
  • , Sandro Galea

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

As climate change alters the behavior of Atlantic hurricanes, these storms are trending stronger, wetter, and slower moving over coastal and island populations. Hurricane Dorian exemplified all three attributes. Dorian’s destructive passage over the Abaco Islands, Bahamas, on September 1, 2019, exposed residents of its capital, Marsh Harbour, to a prolonged encounter with the storm’s core. After Dorian’s fierce front eyewall and towering storm surge tore apart shanty town habitats and eviscerated concrete homesites, residents desperately sought refuge during the brief respite when Dorian’s eye passed directly overhead. The category 5 winds then resumed abruptly and Dorian continued its relentless destruction. This article focuses on the storm’s mental health consequences, drawing on observations of on-site clinicians as well as findings from previous research on the mental health effects of Atlantic hurricanes and the transformation of hurricane hazards resulting from climate change. To protect island and coastal populations against climate-driven storms, disaster planning policy should emphasize resilience-focused prevention and mitigation strategies. In the aftermath of these events, health system response should include community outreach, case finding, and evidence-based interventions that optimize the use of mental health professionals.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2120-2127
Number of pages8
JournalHealth Affairs
Volume39
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2020

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