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CONTACT: Randee Sacks, 212-305-8044
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S MAILMAN SCHOOL OF
PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE CHILDREN’S HEALTH FUND LAUNCH
“OPERATION ASSIST”—MOBILE
MEDICAL UNITS PROVIDING EMERGENCY SERVICES TO CHILDREN AND FAMILIES IN
THE AREAS HARDEST HIT BY HURRICANE KATRINA
MUSIC LEGEND PAUL SIMON
AND DR. IRWIN REDLENER,
CO-FOUNDERS OF THE
CHILDREN’S HEALTH FUND,
TO MEET MOBILE UNITS ON
SITE WHEN THEY ARRIVE IN BILOXI, MISSISSIPPI
(New York) – September 2, 2005 – The Children’s Health Fund and the
National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia’s Mailman School
of Public Health announce the launch of Operation Assist, a unique
collaboration to organize programs supporting health and public health
needs during the current crisis. Operation Assist will provide
direct health services to children and families in the areas hardest
hit by Hurricane Katrina through custom-designed, fully equipped,
state-of-the-art mobile medical units (MMUs) developed by The
Children’s Health Fund.
Music legend Paul Simon and Irwin Redlener, MD, will go to Biloxi,
Mississippi on Monday, September 5 to survey the devastation of
Hurricane Katrina and to meet the Operation Assist MMUs as they arrive
in Biloxi. Mr. Simon co-founded The Children’s Health Fund (CHF)
– a children’s health and advocacy organization that has been providing
comprehensive healthcare to medically underserved communities
throughout the U.S. – with Dr. Irwin Redlener, associate dean at the
Mailman School and director of its National Center for Disaster
Preparedness (NCDP).
Operation Assist will address the critical need for immediate medical
services, as well as bring significant public health expertise into the
field by providing needs assessment; prevention and management of
infectious disease; data collection and analysis for long-term
planning. Mental health professionals will also be included in
teams, as available.
“NCDP and CHF believe that there will be a long-term need for medical
support services, well beyond the acute needs related to the direct
consequences of the hurricane,” stated Dr. Irwin Redlener. He
added, “We are also certain that the rebuilding of the healthcare
infrastructure will be a lengthy process, and mobile facilities in
certain communities might be of extreme value in the short- and
long-term.”
A similar program was organized following Hurricane Andrew in 1992, and
the combined CHF / NCDP team has extensive relevant experience in
disaster response, including 9/11 in NYC and international disasters.
Stated Paul Simon, “This is a heartbreaking, unbearable tragedy.
I’m hoping that our efforts, along with the efforts of so many others,
will make a difference for those who are suffering.”
Potential target communities for these programs include areas directly
hit by Hurricane Katrina, as well as those immediately adjacent.
In addition, large numbers of evacuees will need substantially
increased health services capacity in the communities to which they are
relocated, including States that were not affected directly by the
storm. Operation Assist will have two MMUs available, with the
first arriving in Biloxi on Monday, September 5.
Each MMU is approximately 35 feet long, is self-contained and includes
2-3 examination rooms, nurse’s station, waiting and registration areas
and appropriate generators. All units are also equipped with
computers for recording and tracking of medical and demographic
information. They will also be equipped with satellite and
standard communications equipment. The MMU can be deployed
anywhere with accessible roadways.
MMUs will be staffed by physicians or other primary care providers,
nurses, registrars and drivers. These personnel will be drawn
from existing CHF national staff and, potentially, from other
institutions as well.
How to help:
To contribute to Operation Assist, please go to www.childrenshealthfund.org.
The National Center for Disaster Preparedness at the Mailman School of
Public Health is an academically-based, inter-disciplinary program
focused on the nation’s capacity to prevent and respond to terrorism
and major disasters. NCDP provides curriculum development in
bioterrorism, training for public health professionals and other first
responders, development of model programs, a wide-ranging research
agenda and public policy analysis around issues germane to disaster
preparedness. www.ncdp.mailman.columbia.edu
The only accredited school of public health in New York City, and among
the first in the nation, Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public
Health provides instruction and research opportunities to more than 850
graduate students in pursuit of masters and doctoral degrees. Its
students and nearly 250 multi-disciplinary faculty engage in research
and service in the city, nation, and around the world, concentrating on
biostatistics, environmental health sciences, epidemiology, health
policy and management, population and family health, and sociomedical
sciences. www.mailman.hs.columbia.edu
The Children’s Health Fund, founded in 1987, is a not-for-profit
organization committed to providing medical care to the nation’s most
medically underserved population – homeless and disadvantaged
children. To date, The Children’s Health Fund’s national network
of 17 pediatric programs has treated more than 350,000 children. www.childrenshealthfund.org
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