Narrative trajectories of disaster response: ethical preparedness from Katrina to COVID-19.
Yoshiko IwaiSarah HoldrenLeah Teresa RosenNina Y HuPublished in: Medical humanities (2021)
While COVID-19 brings unprecedented challenges to the US healthcare system, understanding narratives of historical disasters illuminates ethical complexities shared with COVID-19. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina revealed a lack of disaster preparation and protocol, not dissimilar to the challenges faced by COVID-19 healthcare workers. A case study of Memorial Hospital during Hurricane Katrina reported by journalist-MD Sheri Fink reveals unique ethical challenges at the forefront of health crises. These challenges include disproportionate suffering in structurally vulnerable populations, as seen in COVID-19 where marginalised groups across the USA experience higher rates of disease and COVID-19-related death. Journalistic accounts of Katrina and COVID-19 offer unique perspectives on the ethical challenges present within medicine and society, and analysis of such stories reveals narrative trajectories anticipated in the aftermath of COVID-19. Through lenses of social suffering and structural violence, these narratives reinforce the need for systemic change, including legal action, ethical preparedness and physician protection to ensure high-quality care during times of crises. Narrative Medicine-as a practice of interrogating stories in medicine and re-centering the patient-offers a means to contextualise individual accounts of suffering during health crises in larger social matrices.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- healthcare
- public health
- mental health
- primary care
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- randomized controlled trial
- depressive symptoms
- palliative care
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- climate change
- quality improvement
- chronic pain
- electronic health record
- liquid chromatography
- simultaneous determination