Older adults face serious risks during hurricanes

Texas Army National Guard members Sergio Esquivel, left, and Ernest Barmore carry 81-year-old Ramona Bennett after she and other residents were rescued from their Pine Forest Village neighborhood due to high water from Hurricane Harvey August 29, 2017 in Houston, Texas. (Credit: Erich Schlegel/Getty Images)

Natural disasters are often particularly hard on vulnerable members of the community and hurricanes are no exception.

David Dosa, a faculty member at the School of Public Health at Brown University, studies the impact of hurricanes on residents of nursing homes and assisted living facilities in particular.

With Hurricane Florence bearing down on the Southeast coast and the potential for major disaster, he shares insights from prior research on the effect of hurricanes in recent years.

Q

You have studied the effects that hurricanes, including Katrina, have had on residents of nursing homes and assisted living communities. What have you found?

A

If there is one thing we have found repeatedly in our research, it is the simple fact that older adults and hurricanes do not mix. Natural disasters such as Hurricane Florence have a profound destabilizing effect on older adults, who often have multiple medical problems including functional and cognitive limitations. They often also have medication and nutritional needs that suffer in the days following a storm. This is particularly true of residents of long-term-care facilities such as nursing homes and assisted living communities.

Our research on long-term-care residents following Hurricane Katrina and other hurricanes found that many more people died following hurricane disasters than in non-hurricane years. These numbers were often significantly higher than the death certificate accounts cited after the storms.

Q

As Hurricane Florence approaches the coast, what would you tell residents of South Carolina, North Carolina, and Virginia based on what you’ve learned?

A

If you are an elder living in the affected community, heed evacuation recommendations; ensure that you have ample medication and medical supplies in the days prior to the storm; leave the area if you have complicated health care needs or can evacuate to family or friends outside of the affected area; and ensure that you are carrying a list of your medications and medical issues in case you are not able to advocate for yourself in the days after a storm.

If you are family member living outside of the area, make sure you inquire as to what your loved one’s plans will be in case cellular phone communication is not possible in the days after the storm. If they reside in an assisted living or nursing home, check in with the facility to identify what evacuation plans have been made or if some other arrangements have been made.

Q

For nursing home residents, is it better to evacuate or shelter in place during a hurricane?

A

Unlike some other disasters (e.g. earthquakes, explosions, etc.), hurricanes do provide some lead time to prepare and make an educated decision on whether it is better to evacuate or shelter in place for a particular facility. Nevertheless, it is a difficult decision either way.

Our previous work showed that for nursing home residents, it is generally safer to shelter in place if at all possible, especially if enough supplies and staffing can be arranged for the days following a disaster. In fact, evacuation itself was seen as an independent risk factor for death and mortality among the large cohort of nursing home residents we studied, even when you factored in the large number of deaths at several highly visible nursing home disasters.

This might seem counterintuitive to some but was not surprising to medical directors and administrators on the ground faced with making difficult decisions on whether to evacuate or shelter in place.

As one administrator told me in the days following Hurricane Katrina: “I had to decide whether I evacuated my residents knowing that several would almost certainly die during the evacuation and subsequent relocation to a temporary facility, or risk the fact that Anderson Cooper would be on my doorstep in the days following the storm asking why we didn’t evacuate. You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.”

Dosa and colleagues from Brown and the University of South Florida will study the effect of Hurricane Irma in Florida and Hurricane Harvey in Texas on frail older adults living in nursing homes and assisted living communities, he says. The National Institutes of Health is providing support for the new research.

Source: Brown University