The impact of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Rico's health system: post-disaster perceptions and experiences of health care providers and administrators.
Sheilla R MaderaNelson Varas-DíazMark PadillaKevin GroveKariela Rivera-BusteloJeffrey RamosVioleta Contreras-RamirezSergio Rivera-RodríguezRicardo Vargas-MolinaJose SantiniPublished in: Global health research and policy (2021)
Participants' narratives emphasize that the management of Hurricane Maria was fraught with political and economic constraints affecting Puerto Rico. Ineffective planning and post-Maria responses of the local and federal governments were determinants of the disaster's impact. The findings contribute to a growing scientific literature indicating that Hurricane Maria revealed 'the collapse before the collapse,' alluding to the structural deficiencies that presaged the catastrophic event. In the context of governmental abandonment, the authors argue for the importance of developing alternative strategies in post-disaster health care provision among health professionals and administrators who work at the front lines of recovery.