• And yet, despite these warnings - not to mention real-life influenza outbreaks in 2009, 2013 and 2017 - the gaps in America's pandemic response have never been filled. (huffpost.com)
  • Hurricane Irma was an extremely powerful Cape Verde hurricane that caused widespread destruction across its path in September 2017. (wikipedia.org)
  • The ninth named storm, fourth hurricane, second major hurricane, and first Category 5 hurricane of the 2017 season, Irma caused widespread and catastrophic damage throughout its long lifetime, particularly in the northeastern Caribbean and the Florida Keys. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hurricane Irma was the top Google searched term in the U.S. and globally in 2017. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hurricane Harvey made landfall on the Texas coast on August 25, 2017, as a Category 4 storm. (cdc.gov)
  • On September 7, 2017, a Category 5 hurricane, Irma, reached the Lesser Antilles, including the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. (cdc.gov)
  • Hurricane Irma then continued its path across the Greater Antilles and made landfall in south Florida on September 10, 2017. (cdc.gov)
  • Those are the groups hardest hit by Harvey, according to a December 2017 survey of 24 affected Gulf Coast counties conducted by the Episcopal Health Foundation (EHF) and the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. (texmed.org)
  • In 2017, Hurricane Harvey flooded chemical plants and oil refineries in Houston, resulting in the release of cancer-causing substances like into the nearby environment. (cancer.org)
  • Naresh Kumar, Ph.D. , of the University of Miami, will examine the distribution of polychlorinated biphenyls (PBCs) and heavy metals in the aftermath of hurricane Maria, which struck Puerto Rico in 2017, and their associated health risks to communities in Guánica Municipality. (clu-in.org)
  • The 2017 hurricane season is on track to become one of the most active ever. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • In fact, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), from 1851 to 2017, Florida sustained 117 direct hits, representing a whopping 40 percent of all hurricanes in the U.S. Most of us manage to recover, even after we lose our homes and possessions, and we stay put. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • Irma was the first Category 5 hurricane to strike the Leeward Islands on record, followed by Maria two weeks later. (wikipedia.org)
  • Favorable conditions allowed Irma to rapidly intensify into a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson wind scale by late on August 31. (wikipedia.org)
  • On September 4, Irma resumed intensifying, becoming a Category 5 hurricane by early on the next day. (wikipedia.org)
  • Another eyewall replacement cycle caused Irma to weaken back to a Category 4 hurricane, but the storm re-attained Category 5 status before making landfall in Cuba. (wikipedia.org)
  • Early on August 31, shortly after the development of a central dense overcast (CDO) and an eye feature, Irma underwent rapid intensification, becoming a Category 2 hurricane at 18:00 UTC and then a Category 3 hurricane, becoming a major hurricane - around 00:00 UTC on September 1. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hurricane Irma is shaping up to be a potentially catastrophic storm that remains on course to hit Florida by Sunday. (duke.edu)
  • Coming immediately after Hurricane Harvey, Irma is increasing attention to the relationship of severe weather events to climate change. (duke.edu)
  • Whatever the political reaction after Harvey and Irma, the storms are making clear their implications for energy infrastructure. (duke.edu)
  • Already, energy companies in the state are bracing for the hazards that Hurricane Irma, which registered at a category 5 on Wednesday, could bring . (duke.edu)
  • EPA is currently responding to Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and Maria. (epa.gov)
  • In the Continental United States alone, we have seen two tropical storms (Cindy and Emily) and two hurricanes (Harvey and Irma). (doctormattintampa.com)
  • Climate change can make extreme weather events such as hurricanes and wildfires more frequent and unpredictable, and can result in more severe consequences. (cancer.org)
  • These workers - who clear debris and build anew after hurricanes, floods and wildfires - perform the most arduous tasks. (publicintegrity.org)
  • Just in the last month, we've seen the profound impact of hurricanes fueled by warm water temperatures and wildfires fueled by warm temperatures," Rudolph said during a press briefing last month about our increasing number of extreme heat days. (phi.org)
  • With hurricanes, fires and floods making the news, many people are asking whether climate change is contributing to catastrophic storms, and if such storms create increased exposure to pests or pesticides. (pesticide.org)
  • When power outages occur after severe weather (such as severe storms, hurricanes or tornadoes), using alternative sources of power can cause carbon monoxide (CO) to build up in a home and poison the people and animals inside. (cdc.gov)
  • Access to care was better during Harvey than during past storms, according to Dr. Shah. (texmed.org)
  • After previous storms, medical facilities made important infrastructure improvements - like installing "submarine" doors - to keep out flood waters. (texmed.org)
  • They are whipped by hurricanes, lashed by storms and crippled by earthquakes. (iadb.org)
  • An extraordinary Atlantic hurricane season is still underway, one that has seen the National Hurricane Center exhaust its supply of names and resort to Greek alphabet for remaining storms. (progressivereform.org)
  • This month was the worst September on record in terms of the number of named storms, and 2020 overall is second only to 2005's devastating succession of hurricanes (which included Katrina) in the number of named storms over the entire season. (progressivereform.org)
  • Floridians are no stranger to these storms and hurricanes. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • It is especially prevalent in areas struck by hurricanes and tropical storms, which are common in South Florida. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • Deborah Watkins, Ph.D. , of the University of Michigan School of Public Health and the Northeastern University SRP Center, will discuss the effect of Hurricane Maria on the PROTECT birth cohort in Puerto Rico. (clu-in.org)
  • Hurricane Maria's devastation in Puerto Rico. (phi.org)
  • She has supported CDC's emergency response efforts for Ebola and Zika and hurricane recovery efforts in Puerto Rico. (cdc.gov)
  • For farm workers living in impoverished communities and sub-standard housing, exposure to toxic chemicals, flooding and lack of insurance have resulted in a greater need for assistance. (pesticide.org)
  • For thirty years, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) has traveled to communities throughout the country to conduct investigations at hazardous waste sites to keep communities safe from harmful environmental exposures and related diseases. (cdc.gov)
  • CDC and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) have guidance and technical materials available in both English and Spanish to help communities prepare for hurricanes and floods ( Table 1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the federal agency created to protect workers, has ignored research on workplace safeguards against post-disaster toxic exposures. (publicintegrity.org)
  • Keeping yourself and a developing fetus safe from toxic exposures can be a real challenge - and it's just one example of how environmental and reproductive justice issues collide in "fenceline" communities. (grist.org)
  • James Riverkeeper Jamie Brunkow shared how his team at James River Association and its organizational and community partners secured state reforms to remediate flood-exposed toxic coal ash dumps and raised millions to install living shorelines that will brace coastal communities from sea level rise while protecting water quality. (progressivereform.org)
  • And back on the mainland, Houston and surrounding areas are rebuilding and dealing with the toxic aftermath of the catastrophic flooding and subsequent air pollution caused by Hurricane Harvey, one of the nation's most destructive natural disasters to date, which killed at least 82 people. (phi.org)
  • The third study is related to Hurricane Harvey, which was associated with flood-related damage to chemical plants, oil refineries, and flooding of hazardous waste sites, including 13 Superfund sites. (clu-in.org)
  • Still, oil refineries, chemical plants and shale drilling sites have reported Harvey-triggered flaring, leaks and chemical discharges -releasing more than 1 million pounds of air pollutants in the week after the storm. (duke.edu)
  • This leads many to conclude that climate change exacerbated the impacts of hurricane Harvey. (climatechangenews.com)
  • However, to apply this argument directly and attribute (and quantify) the impacts from Harvey itself to human-induced climate change, neglects that climate change is not just about warming. (climatechangenews.com)
  • Environmental health impacts from the hurricanes included effects on industries, chemical plants, and hazardous waste sites. (cdc.gov)
  • All this compounds the impacts to affected populations and complicates response. (colorado.edu)
  • The Fifth National Climate Assessment explores subnational climate change risks, impacts, and responses in each of the 10 regions shown. (globalchange.gov)
  • The storm caused catastrophic damage in Barbuda, Saint BarthĂ©lemy, Saint Martin, Anguilla, and the Virgin Islands as a Category 5 hurricane. (wikipedia.org)
  • Catastrophic flooding in the Houston area after Hurricane Harvey. (phi.org)
  • It was also the most intense hurricane to strike the continental United States since Katrina in 2005, the first major hurricane to make landfall in Florida since Wilma in the same year, and the first Category 4 hurricane to strike the state since Charley in 2004. (wikipedia.org)
  • The unprecedented amount of rainfall accompanying Hurricane Harvey immediately raised the question whether and to what extent climate change is to blame. (climatechangenews.com)
  • Changes in the atmospheric circulation can increase the thermodynamic effect (as we saw during floods Louisiana in 2016 ) or act in the opposite direction to the thermodynamic effect, leading to locally decreasing the risk of extreme rainfall or canceling the effect of the warming alone (examples here ). (climatechangenews.com)
  • To quantify the impact of human-induced climate change on Harvey and to estimate whether it indeed exacerbated the rainfall thus requires taking into account the atmospheric circulation as well as the overall warming. (climatechangenews.com)
  • However, while such studies are now routinely conducted for heatwaves and large scale rainfall in mid-latitudes (see Carbon Brief for an overview), it is still the cutting edge for hurricanes. (climatechangenews.com)
  • In southeast Texas, record rainfall caused extensive flooding and damage to public infrastructure and communities, and displaced thousands of persons. (cdc.gov)
  • Intuitively these make sense as drivers: warmer temperatures lead to snowmelt and river thaws in the North, producing a lot of runoff in a short period of time, while thunderstorms occur frequently across Central and Eastern regions bringing intense rainfall that can generate flash flooding. (rms.com)
  • A number of areas are heading into the spring flood season well ahead on rainfall and snowpack, leading to saturated soils that will have a tougher time handling the downpours that can occur. (rms.com)
  • It's weeks or months later that the population of disease-carrying mosquitoes begins to rise, especially in areas that received more rainfall than usual but did not flood. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • This brief presents key arguments for prioritizing and supporting reconstruction personnel working in the aftermath of flooding disasters. (bakerinstitute.org)
  • In this second installment of Hurricane Harvey's aftermath, Abby Martin explores how the petrochemical industry dominates the city and why its low-income, minority areas are at the highest-risk for flooding and pollution, earning them the name "sacrifice zones. (mediaroots.org)
  • Although nobody can stop a hurricane, we can take steps to protect and restore our health in the aftermath. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • Many injuries and illnesses from hurricanes and floods occur during the response and recovery phases. (cdc.gov)
  • To improve disaster response planning, the study authors recommended that accreditation requirements for cancer care programs include compliance with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Emergency Preparedness Rule. (cancer.org)
  • In addition to improving preparedness, the plan also provides a response and remediation framework for other metropolitan areas across the country. (epa.gov)
  • I'm Hailey McCalla [assumed spelling] from CDC's Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response Division of Emergency Operations. (cdc.gov)
  • Within the division of state and local readiness, her work aims to advance emergency preparedness, planning and response, and recovery efforts at the national, state and local levels. (cdc.gov)
  • Dr. Judy Kruger from the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response. (cdc.gov)
  • And you may have a larger role in emergency preparedness, response and recovery than you realize. (cdc.gov)
  • We base our mission to champion the needs of children in emergency preparedness and response around four main pillars. (cdc.gov)
  • We're always looking backward at where the holes are," said Downey, who has been researching American disaster response for over a decade. (huffpost.com)
  • CDC and ATSDR also offer a disaster response clinical consultation service to assist health care providers, public health professionals, and emergency response partners. (cdc.gov)
  • The health problems that creates become more severe when a disaster like Hurricane Harvey strikes. (texmed.org)
  • This creates questions about who in addition to the previously vulnerable are at risk to disaster and demonstrates that, in an era of changing climate, the process of tracing pathways to exposure is more complicated. (colorado.edu)
  • Disaster scholars have long demonstrated that low-income people and racial minorities are the most likely to live in low-lying areas and in lower-quality housing, placing them at continual threat of flooding. (colorado.edu)
  • In comparison to predominantly white communities, black, Latino, and low-income neighborhoods have a disproportionate number of infrastructure systems that have outdated development codes, are not maintained, are less efficient in rerouting high peak flows during flash floods, and cost more to repair following a disaster. (colorado.edu)
  • Disaster restoration worker Marcos takes a selfie at work in Fort Myers, Florida, after Hurricane Ian. (publicintegrity.org)
  • And it's doing it at a time when affected communities - especially Black, Brown, and low-income communities - are all the more vulnerable to natural disaster due to the Trump administration's rollbacks of environmental safeguards and its reckless response to the COVID-19 pandemic. (progressivereform.org)
  • I was honored to be appointed by the Federal Communications Commission as the Vice-Chair of its Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee (BDAC) Disaster Response and Recovery Working Group (DRRWG). (wia.org)
  • Residents and businesses were exposed to highly contaminated flood waters from Superfund sites. (pesticide.org)
  • Hurricane Harvey: Emergency Management Officials have requested that people escaping flood waters as a last resort do not stay in the attic. (cdc.gov)
  • Most of these deaths likely were caused by drowning in flood waters within the first few days after impact (e.g., drowning at home or in vehicles). (cdc.gov)
  • Their data suggest that PCB concentration in Bay increased four time after hurricane Maria, and communities PCB exposure through inhalation and ingestion could have likely increased after the hurricane through ingestion and inhalation, because some of the community members rely on the Bay for seafood and fish. (clu-in.org)
  • She will characterize changes in exposure to environmental contaminants among pregnant participants, comparing biomarker concentrations in samples collected before Hurricane Maria to levels in the weeks and months following the storm. (clu-in.org)
  • On the other side of the country, Puerto Ricans are reeling from the devastation wrought by Hurricane Maria. (phi.org)
  • Common hazards include vehicle- and nonvehicle-related drowning, carbon monoxide poisoning (e.g., from any gasoline-powered engine, including generators and clean-up equipment), electrocution, falls, lacerations, and exposure to mold and industrial and household chemicals ( 1 - 8 ). (cdc.gov)
  • The third and final session will highlight how climate-related disasters, and exposure to harmful chemicals redistributed during these events, affect people's health and well-being. (clu-in.org)
  • While exposure to harmful chemicals isn't good for anyone, pregnant people and children are especially vulnerable. (grist.org)
  • If we thus want to know whether Harvey is a "harbinger" for the future of Houston, the attribution question addressing the overall likelihood of a hurricane like Harvey to occur, which includes many variables other than temperature and sea level rise that interact, needs to be answered by carefully estimating the likelihood of such hurricanes developing in a warming world as well as how much rain they bring. (climatechangenews.com)
  • It makes you realize, these megastorms, if you haven't been hit by one, your worst-case scenario is nowhere near a true worst-case scenario," said Daniel J. Kelly , the executive director of the New Jersey Office of Recovery and Rebuilding, as he recalled his state's struggle to respond to Hurricane Sandy. (duke.edu)
  • Parts of the Northeastern United States are still recovering from Hurricane Sandy. (epa.gov)
  • These weather events also contribute to persistent storm damage and flooding, increasing exposure to fungus and mold-related health effects. (nih.gov)
  • However, exposure to mold remains a serious problem because many people have not had the money to fix flood-damaged homes, he says. (texmed.org)
  • After a flood, moisture can promote mold growth in buildings and other structures. (bakerinstitute.org)
  • Exposure to mold can cause respiratory problems, allergies, and other adverse health effects. (bakerinstitute.org)
  • Over the last four years I have been engaged in testing patients for CIRS- mostly due to mold (more accurately, exposures to biotoxins in water damaged buildings) and Lyme biotoxin. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • Contact the nearest Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit (PEHSU)to learn how to protect your child from exposure to health hazards in the environment. (cdc.gov)
  • EPA recently updated the 2016 Wildfire Smoke: Guide for Public Health Officials (PDF), an outline of whose health is most affected by wildfire smoke, how to reduce exposure to smoke, what public health actions are recommended, and how to communicate air quality to the public. (epa.gov)
  • Children's rapid development from before they are born through early childhood makes them more vulnerable to environmental exposures. (cdc.gov)
  • Dr. Amy Watson works in the Emergency Response Branch of the Division of Laboratory Sciences, National Center for Environmental Health at CDC. (cdc.gov)
  • NIEHS research uses state-of-the-art science and technology to investigate the interplay between environmental exposures, human biology, genetics, and common diseases to help prevent disease and improve human health. (nih.gov)
  • Given the enormity of Hurricane Harvey, we didn't have enough epidemiologists, we didn't have enough environmental sanitarians, and we didn't have enough nurses and clinicians," Dr. Shah said. (texmed.org)
  • Reconstruction workers operating in post-flooding environments face a range of physical and environmental challenges that can impact their well-being and ability to perform tasks effectively. (bakerinstitute.org)
  • Speakers will also share innovative tools to track environmental exposures and improve public health. (clu-in.org)
  • Hurricanes are most devastating natural disasters, which dramatically change the physical landscape and take a heavy toll on human life, demolish infrastructure and property, and exacerbate environmental stressors that persists for months after their landfall. (clu-in.org)
  • That's why researchers from EPA and the Sandia National Lab are helping the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene prepare an environmental response and remediation plan for incidents such as the release of anthrax. (epa.gov)
  • The series will feature SRP-funded researchers, collaborators, and other subject-matter experts who aim to better understand and address how climate change affects human exposures to hazardous substances and the public health consequences of a changing climate and identify ways to build health resilience. (clu-in.org)
  • Even as incidents like the Arkema chemical plant explosion driven by Hurricane Harvey have grabbed headlines ( and led to a climate justice movement in the courts ), the Trump administration has repealed federal safeguards against chemical disasters at tens of thousands of the largest, most polluting hazardous industrial facilities in the nation. (progressivereform.org)
  • For example, climate change-related severe weather events, such as hurricanes, can stir up sediment and alter the gradient of man-made pollutants to which coastal populations are exposed. (nih.gov)
  • My sister in Florida just dealt with the largest hurricane to ever hit the state. (pesticide.org)
  • Irma's hurricane-force winds and related storm surges caused substantial damage in the Caribbean and Florida. (cdc.gov)
  • A construction worker pushes a wheelbarrow in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, on Nov. 2, 2022, after Hurricane Ian devastated the area on Sept. 28, 2022. (publicintegrity.org)
  • Standing before a two-story house on the coast of Fort Myers Beach, Florida, where Hurricane Ian unleashed a seven-foot storm surge two weeks earlier, Marcos looked at the structure, shredded beyond repair. (publicintegrity.org)
  • Flooding and other types of natural disasters can have severe consequences for affected areas, often significantly damaging infrastructure, displacing residents, and disrupting essential services. (bakerinstitute.org)
  • Houston has a high amount of residential segregation and housing discrimination which forces residents seeking affordable housing into marginalized areas where they are exposed to higher amounts of pollutants, less access to amenities, and are often at a higher risk of flooding. (mediaroots.org)
  • Losses due to floods are projected to increase disproportionately in US Census tracts with higher percentages of Black residents. (globalchange.gov)
  • The recent hurricanes and California's tragic fires are another demonstration of the fact that climate change is already threatening our health and safety," says Linda Rudolph, MD, MPH, director of the Public Health Institute's Center for Climate Change and Health in Oakland, CA. "And these incidents are only going to get worse if we don't act now. (phi.org)
  • Throughout the past few decades , hurricanes in particular have drawn attention to the need to fight climate change, with scientists recognizing that although climate change is not the cause of hurricanes, "a warmer planet will produce bigger and more destructive hurricanes. (duke.edu)
  • Through joint advocacy by CPR, Waterkeeper Alliance, and our allies, we are pushing EPA to adopt the agency's own proposed provisions for reporting storm and flood risks and to make explicit existing requirements to respond to the risk that extreme weather poses to industrial facilities. (progressivereform.org)
  • The idea of this team started in 2009, when our current division director, Dr. Georgina Peacock helped staff the first Children's Health team in the Emergency Operations Center, or EOC, during the H1N1 response. (cdc.gov)
  • In Texas, officials are managing a hurricane response with severe flooding and now a massive mosquito outbreak. (pesticide.org)
  • Immediately after a hurricane, however the mosquito population explodes when the mosquito eggs laid in the soil during the previous floods hatch. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • In the first installment of the series, Abby Martin introduced viewers to a neighborhood called Lakewood that was virtually ignored by both state and federal officials during and after the hurricane. (mediaroots.org)
  • As part of the overall U.S. Department of Health and Human Services response and recovery operations, CDC and ATSDR are supporting public health and medical care functions for affected communities and persons displaced by the hurricanes. (cdc.gov)
  • There are potential public health and safety concerns after hurricane impact. (cdc.gov)
  • The survey initially found that blacks were most likely to report health problems due to Harvey. (texmed.org)
  • The full impact of Harvey won't be known anytime soon simply because there aren't enough resources dedicated to evaluating it, says Umair Shah, MD, executive director at Harris County Public Health. (texmed.org)
  • OSHA has enacted an emergency-response policy favoring a fast recovery over worker health. (publicintegrity.org)
  • BACKGROUND: After the publication of a 2014 consensus statement regarding mass critical care during public health emergencies, much has been learned about surge responses and the care of overwhelming numbers of patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. (bvsalud.org)
  • When CPU is activated for an emergency response, we're known as the Children's Health Team. (cdc.gov)
  • However, in the wake of a passing hurricane, and long after, our health is at an increased risk. (doctormattintampa.com)
  • The hazard with hurricanes are the associated winds, storm surge and, most of all, rain. (duke.edu)
  • These areas might also have outdated infrastructure and could be subject to residual flooding, localized flooding, and potential overflow of the nearby bayous. (colorado.edu)
  • At the time, it was considered the most powerful hurricane on record in the open Atlantic region, outside of the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, until it was surpassed by Hurricane Dorian two years later. (wikipedia.org)
  • It was also the third-strongest Atlantic hurricane at landfall ever recorded, just behind the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane and Dorian. (wikipedia.org)
  • There's no mystery as to why: Climate change is driving an increase in the frequency and strength of Atlantic hurricanes. (progressivereform.org)
  • And finally, discuss some of the resources we have for educators in planning response and recovery phases of emergencies. (cdc.gov)
  • Kim Anderson, Ph.D. , of the Oregon State University SRP Center will talk about three different studies related to Arctic, wildfire, and hurricane cases. (clu-in.org)
  • Dr. LaRose has been in practice for more than four decades and he had rebuilt after previous hurricanes. (texmed.org)
  • Potential sources of hurricane-related exposures, such as drinking water and exhaust from gas-powered generators, as well as methods for linking exposures to adverse birth outcomes, will be discussed. (clu-in.org)
  • According to the spring flood outlook released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA), a third of the United States is at risk of inland flooding this spring - that's roughly 1.26 million square miles, covering 23 states and affecting almost 130 million Americans (Cappucci). (rms.com)
  • Yvette shared details surrounding the dangerous situation that unfolded at a chemical plant in Houston after Hurricane Harvey hit the area. (mediaroots.org)
  • Because children's bodies are smaller and still developing, they can become sick faster and at lower levels of exposure. (grist.org)
  • When Houston providers were hit by Hurricane Harvey last month, they experienced limited power outages thanks to investments -smart meters and a fault location, isolation and service restoration system-made after Hurricane Ike in 2008. (duke.edu)
  • The word Irmageddon was coined soon after the hurricane to describe the damage caused by the hurricane. (wikipedia.org)
  • But the damage Harvey caused was so extensive he didn't know if he had the heart to do it again. (texmed.org)
  • A report compiled by the United Nations, taking into account exposure to natural events and a society's response, found four nations of the region (Guatemala, Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Nicaragua) to be among the world's 15 nations most at risk from natural disasters. (iadb.org)
  • In the second installment of the series "After Harvey," Abby speaks with Dr. Robert Bullard about these issues, touching on gentrification of the city, where wealth is focused, and how modern weather events impact communities like Lakewood. (mediaroots.org)
  • In response to mosquitos, the state of Texas sprayed over 6.39 million acres [2] with an insecticide and recommended people use repellents and take other precautions. (pesticide.org)
  • For example, recent work in the Clear Creek watershed on the Texas Coast demonstrated that upwards of 40 percent of flood claims between 1999 to 2009 came from outside of the currently configured floodplain. (colorado.edu)
  • the toppled homes and flooded streets in Texas and Louisiana from Hurricane Harvey, with its tens of thousands of people made homeless and billions of dollars in property losses: it's hard to imagine things getting much worse. (iadb.org)
  • There was just a dramatic and ready response - people giving huge amounts of time to operate these clinics. (texmed.org)
  • In fact, one study showed that people with locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer were more likely to die if their radiation therapy was interrupted by hurricanes. (cancer.org)
  • Just over a year later, the stockpile delivered post-exposure prophylaxis to hundreds of postal workers who had been exposed to anthrax. (huffpost.com)
  • The impact of Harvey may not have been due to climate change alone, but the size of the storm was consistent with expert predictions that climate change will bring increasingly larger and more severe hurricanes. (pesticide.org)
  • To a certain extent, disasters like firestorms and hurricanes are an unavoidable part of life on Earth-scientists do not believe they are a direct result of climate change. (phi.org)