Public Health in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria

Public Health in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria

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This issue brief provides a snapshot of key public health challenges in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. It discusses topics such as mortality, food, water, sanitation, health care infrastructure, and mental health on the island in the wake of the storm.

PDF) Enhancing Disaster Resilience by Reducing Stress-Associated Health Impacts

Promoting Integrated Mental Health Care Services in Disaster Response Programs: Lessons Learned After the Impact of Hurricane María in Puerto Rico, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness

Aftermath of Maria: An Ethnographic Review of Rescue, Recovery, Climate, and Social Justice in Puerto Rico. - Document - Gale OneFile: Health and Medicine

A Closer Look at Indirect Causes of Death After Hurricane Maria Using a Semiparametric Model, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness

Public Health in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria

PDF) The impact of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Rico's health system: post-disaster perceptions and experiences of health care providers and administrators

NHESS - Current and future rainfall-driven flood risk from hurricanes in Puerto Rico under 1.5 and 2 °C climate change

PDF) A CLOSER LOOK AT INDIRECT CAUSES OF DEATH AFTER HURRICANE MARIA USING A SEMIPARAMETRIC MODEL

Frontiers A perspective for identifying intersections among the social, engineering, and geosciences to address water crises

Appendix D: Integrating Community Vulnerabilities into the Assessment of Disaster-Related Morbidity and Mortality: Two Illustrative Case Studies, A Framework for Assessing Mortality and Morbidity After Large-Scale Disasters

The NYC Health Department's Reflections on First-Ever Public Health Deployments in Support of Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands After the 2017 Hurricane Season

PDF) A CLOSER LOOK AT INDIRECT CAUSES OF DEATH AFTER HURRICANE MARIA USING A SEMIPARAMETRIC MODEL

Y no quedó nada, nada de la casa, todo salió volando” (And there was nothing left, nothing of the house, everything flew away): a critical medical ecological perspective on the lived experience