Impact on Children and Families of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Preliminary Findings of the Coastal Population Impact Study
Abramson
David M.
author
Columbia University. Sociomedical Sciences
Redlener
Irwin E.
author
Columbia University. Population and Family Health
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Columbia University. Pediatrics
Stehling-Ariza
Nicole A.
author
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Sury
Jonathan
author
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Banister
Akilah N.
author
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Park
Yoon Soo
author
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Columbia University. National Center for Disaster Preparedness
originator
contributor
text
Reports
New York
National Center for Disaster Preparedness
2010
English
Although the ruptured Deepwater Horizon oil well was capped on July 15, 2010, an estimated 3 to 5 million barrels of oil spilled in to the Gulf of Mexico over a three-month period. Several surveys prior to the capping of the well documented the concerns and immediate effects of the oil spill on coastal residents. One report by a team of LSU sociologists highlighted the anxiety caused by the oil spill — nearly 60% of the 925 coastal Louisiana residents interviewed said they were almost constantly worried by the oil spill. As the "acute phase" of the oil spill transitions to a longer-term "chronic phase," researchers at Columbia University's National Center for Disaster Preparedness, in collaboration with the Children's Health Fund and The Marist Poll, interviewed over 1,200 coastal residents in Louisiana and Mississippi, with a particular focus on the short- and potential long-term impact of the disaster on children. This study was informed by work the researchers have done post-Katrina as part of the Gulf Coast Child & Family Health Study, which has documented the enduring effects on impacted populations in the two states, particularly children.
Public health
Individual and family studies
NCDP Research Brief
2010-08
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:9416
NNC
NNC
2010-08-10 09:32:49 -0400
2012-02-06 16:57:56 -0500
1927
eng