US Disaster Preparation and Lack of with Regards to the Hurricanes and US Administration
Introduction
The health policy relating to U.S. disaster preparation or lack thereof with respect to hurricanes is one that must include a better system of communication between the U.S. disaster response teams and the hospitals in the affected regions. As Hurricane Katrina showed, the U.S. was not prepared to handle the level of response needed in the wake of the catastrophe the hurricane produced. The problems with the response to Hurricane Katrina were numerous: there was no National Response Plan (NPR) in place and there was no National Incident Management System (NIMS) in existence. Additionally, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was virtually ineffective: it had been in decline for years, was suffering from significant turnover among top leaders, and the individuals who were in charge lacked the appropriate leadership experience and knowledge to oversee an effective response to a natural disaster like Hurricane Katrina (Lewis, 2009; Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, 2006). Many lessons have been learned since Katrina that have enabled the U.S. to be better prepared to handle hurricanes and ensure that health care facilities are ready to treat those in need. This policy brief will describe the health policy issue, its impact on access/cost/quality, what the policy would do to ensure better access, what some of the potential unintended outcomes of the policy might be, and what stakeholders are likely to support and oppose and why.
The Policy
The policy under discussion is the problem of preparedness and a lack of coordination between the response agencies and local area hospitals. To provide care for people during an emergency situation in a time like a hurricane, proper precautions need to be followed and a protocol has to be developed that all stakeholders can appreciate and abide by. What this policy calls for is interagency collaboration to ensure that the effective quality care is being delivered to those in need during a hurricane disaster. This is an important policy because, as Katrina showed, only agencies that are motivated by a cohesive spirit will perform well. First, FEMA...
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