Haiti Earthquake
On Tuesday, January 12, 2010, an earthquake of 7.0 on the Richter scale struck Haiti. The Haitian government estimates that over 316,000 people died as a result of the earthquake and subsequent tsunami, marking this earthquake as one of the most destructive and fatal in history. The earthquake occurred at approximately 5pm local time and the epicenter of the quake was approximately twenty-five kilometers from the country's capital, Port au Prince. The country (and the Dominican Republic) continued to experience several dozen aftershocks during the remainder of January 2010 that registered as high as 4.5 on the Richter scale. The number of people injured by the quake is the approximate number of people who died from it. More than three times as many people who were injured or killed were left homeless as a result of the quake.
The damage was severe and catastrophic. Thousands of buildings collapsed, leaving unknown numbers of people trapped, and hundreds of thousands of people homeless in the streets. Estimates of casualties are constantly being updated. (Margesson et al., Haiti Earthquake, 2010)
Truly, the aftermath of the 2010 Haiti earthquake is stunning. The paper will discuss the consequences of the natural disaster(s) in Haiti that resulted from the quake. The discussion will include a variety of perspectives, including sociological, economic, environmental, and from a perspective of public health. With specific reference to the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the paper contends that recovery from natural disasters demands a multifaceted approach as diverse and widespread as the effects of the disaster.
Haiti is a country in the Caribbean that is impoverished. It is a country rich in cultural history and cultural vivacity, but with respect to areas such as technology, economy, infrastructure, and others, the country is in the third world. Therefore, the damages of a severe earthquake are costly to any country, no matter their material wealth and resources, but for a country such as Haiti, the effects are more severe.
Recovery efforts have been made extremely difficult by the loss of personnel and infrastructure that would be part of a recovery effort. Among the missing and dead were Haitian government officials and international aid personnel, including many U.N. personnel. Housing, hospitals, schools, and many government buildings collapsed. Basic services such as electricity and water were almost completely disrupted. Major transportation routes were damaged and/or blocked. The Port-au-Prince airport control tower was destroyed; the airport continued to function, and air traffic control authority was quickly transferred to U.S. personnel with portable radar. (Margesson et al., Haiti Earthquake, 2010)
The Haitian people suffered a great loss of life of their people. Recent statistics suggests that 10+% of the total Haitian population died in the quake or afterwards from injuries directly resulting from the quake.
It requires time, equipment, energy, staff, and money to recover bodies and excavate edifices in search of victims. Many people died and many people were injured.
Damages are estimated for a disaster with both 200,000 and 250,000 total dead and missing (i.e., the range of mortality that is estimated to have caused the earthquake) and using Haiti's economic and demographic data. The bottom line is that for a disaster with 200,000 total dead and missing, in a country with Haiti's observable characteristics, damages are expected to be about U.S.$7.2bn (2009 dollars). For a death toll of 250,000 the estimate would be U.S.$8.1bn. Intermediate numbers give intermediate results. Unfortunately, recent estimates place the actual death toll at the top of this range. Nonetheless, the errors attached to these estimates (obtained via bootstrapping) remain quite large, in part because there are relatively few disasters of this size: while the base estimate may be as high as U.S.$8.1bn for 250,000 deaths, an estimate of U.S.$13.9bn is within statistical error. (Cavallo et al., Estimating damages, 2010)
The medical technology and personnel of Haiti were not properly equipped to handle such an emergency. This is another economic and psychological loss suffered by Haitians...
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