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NASW Responds to Hurricane Katrina
NASW/Louisiana's executive director gives an account of chapter relief operations from August 30th through September 5th

August 30, 2005

Day after storm power was sporadic. We finally got power at the chapter office and realized that our phone and network service was impacted. Consequently, the initial requests for messages to be sent to the membership from the Chapter Office had to be sent out from National. It took a day or so for that to be done.

August 31, 2005

The medical trauma unit at LSU Pete Marovich Center was in desperate need of social workers to help with discharge planning of patients being brought in to be triaged out to shelters (special needs and general shelters). In addition, many of those being brought in were in desperate need of some minimal clothing before they could be brought to other shelters. Countless numbers were without shoes or even shocks to cover their injured feet. We contacted churches and local organizations go get us some supplies. Transportation for patients being discharged then emerged as a critical crisis. We negotiated with the Louisiana Association of Nonprofit Organizations (LANO) to help get us some buses to begin bringing evacuees cleared from the MASH type operation to shelters. We were able to get local churches and even the Casinos to help with the transport. The following days, the transport situation got better however, in the first two days post Katrinia it was very basic. My patients on that first day were extremely medically fragile and I helped them connect with hospice resources and family. I became increasingly concerned that they would get overlooked and stayed until I knew they were being transported out.

September 1, 2005

The population in Baton Rouge has doubled. Travel around the city is becoming a problem and supplies (especially gasoline) are a precious commodity. Work continued at the various shelters throughout the city. We were now arranging transport to shelters in other states. This was becoming an increasing problem in terms of locating resources, as we knew our numbers of the future need would surpass our resources with the volume of citizens not yet rescued from New Orleans, Jefferson, St. Bernard, Placquemine, Washington, St. Tammany, and Livingston yet to be identified. We looked for small victories as a motivation to keep us pushing on. Our initial plea for help and direction to social workers met with some success and disappointments as some who had tried to volunteer at the shelters were turned away because they did not have their license on them. We redirected them to other locations in Baton Rouge who were desperate for social work intervention. On news broadcast over television and radio, the plea for medial staff including social workers was obvious. I never felt so proud to be a social worker. Physicians in that MASH set up were constantly having us paged to help with patient to locate placement, displaced family, clarification on how they were to get medicines once they left the MASH unit, their benefits, and just a comforting face and voice. I had my first experience comforting a medical evacuee being brought from the superdome. She had been transported by helicopter because of health problems and had to leave her two children in the care of her brother and his children. She was traumatized by the separation, the conditions in the dome, and the uncertainty of what lay ahead for her and her family. Armed with only pencil, paper, and a cell phone we did some incredible work. Getting telephone numbers and contact information from trauma patients was first order of business. We would continue to work our cell phones in the hopes that a call would go through. Connections made we could allow patient to talk with family desperate to locate their loved ones and for some a reunion was possible.

September 2, 2005

Our shelter population in the state continued to swell, fatigue was setting in on the caregivers (medical and mental health personnel). We now needed to periodically check out the caregivers. Now we realized that the comfort of instant communication and computer access we had become so dependent on was now a very fragile system. We knew the lists of people searching for loved ones and where they were being sent was going to be critical for case management in the future. The major social service and medical delivery system in the state was in the impacted area. For instance, in the New Orleans area they had six methadone clinics. Baton Rouge has one. Many of the patients coming through the MASH type unit had been off of major psychotropic medication and under a great deal of stress. Concerns were mounting daily. Also emerging was the ever-increasing number of children who were separated from their parents and caregivers or children who were with caregivers who were now too ill to take care of them. The potential for a bulging foster care population became apparent (not just in Louisiana but even in the states where the families were being evacuated).

September 3, 2005

Could it just be Saturday? This is just the fifth day since the storm struck and we do not see much improvement except the volume of patients coming in seem to be leveling off as some are now being diverted to other states before coming to the LSU MASH type operation. We continue to provide the same services; however, we are now primarily relocating evacuees to other states. Primary site is Texas (thank God for Texas). My greatest success today was connecting a frail woman with congestive heart failure with her daughter (who herself was staying with friends as her home was flooded). I was lucky and located a nursing facility close to her daughter who was going to travel the next day to the facility to see her mother. That telephone reunion I will cherish for my entire life.

Calls from social workers from throughout the country continue to pour in. I direct them to the American Red Cross. I have also urged them to realize that this is a disaster that will not be of short duration. The re-located, newly homeless, the ill, the unemployed, the separated families, and the trauma will be with many of us for months and years to come. We will desperately need them later. I am proud that I am a social worker. What a great profession.

September 4, 2005

We are beginning to see the impact of the increased involvement of the federal government. More and more have been evacuated from New Orleans. The lesser know affected areas are now coming into focus. The nation catches its breath and realizes the impact that this storm will have on the entire country. We who are in the heart of the disaster can only look to the next sound of a helicopter.

We are now deploying volunteer social workers to the hospitals to help provide support to those who have flooded our facilities. Their needs are so great that the social work staff in the hospitals need additional support. We continue to see displaced children that need intervention. The profession is everywhere. We get messages from organizations that have systems that are up and running. Staff in the Louisiana Chapter has maintained contact through the use of Blackberries.

September 5, 2005

It’s Labor Day in the rest of the country and we are still in crisis intervention mode. Shelter staff and hospital staff that were still in New Orleans have now been evacuated and need Critical Incident Stress Management. We will continue to see the need to provide social work intervention. Case management services will be needed to help displaced individuals and families.

We will be bringing the office back up on Tuesday. There are coordinating meetings scheduled for mental health and nonprofit providers to develop future plans.

 
   
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