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Judi Lynn

(160,644 posts)
Thu Oct 5, 2017, 07:03 AM Oct 2017

Mental health concerns in aftermath of Puerto Rico hurricane


Michael Melia and Danica Coto, Associated Press
 Updated 4:52 am, Thursday, October 5, 2017

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Locked out of his home and with nowhere else to go, Wilfredo Ortiz Marrero rode out Hurricane Maria inside a Jeep, which was lifted off its wheels by floodwaters in the parking lot. He then endured days without enough food or running water.

The lights are back on at his residence for low-income elderly people in the San Juan suburb of Trujillo Alto, and food has started arriving, but he still waits as long as he can each night to leave the company of others in the lobby. Alone in his room, he sometimes starts to shake.
 
. . .

The hurricane that pummeled Puerto Rico two weeks ago and the scarcity-marked aftermath are taking a toll on islanders' equilibrium. The U.S. territory's government counted two suicides among the death toll, which now stands at 34, and with many communities still waiting for power and clean water, there is concern about others reaching a breaking point.

. . .

The count also includes sick and elderly who died in the aftermath of the hurricane, including some who died because oxygen could not be delivered amid power outages. There were also two suicides, but Rossello did not provide details of those.

More:
http://www.chron.com/news/medical/article/Mental-health-concerns-in-aftermath-of-Puerto-12254569.php
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Mental health concerns in aftermath of Puerto Rico hurricane (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2017 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author Not Ruth Oct 2017 #1
The death count of 34 in Puerto Rico is absolute BS, off by a count of 1100 at a minimum Not Ruth Oct 2017 #2

Response to Judi Lynn (Original post)

 

Not Ruth

(3,613 posts)
2. The death count of 34 in Puerto Rico is absolute BS, off by a count of 1100 at a minimum
Thu Oct 5, 2017, 07:58 AM
Oct 2017

On average, without a hurricane, 82 people die on Puerto Rico daily (3.411 million population, 8.8 per thousand annual death rate, 365 days in a year) 34 over 2 weeks implies a 97% reduction over the normal non hurricane death rate. A more realistic number would be 2,300 dead at this point, if you consider double to be a realistic expectation. Mental health concerns should be proportional to the death rate imo.

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