So if you're the type to get a bit of natural-disaster FOMO when blizzards blanket the Northeast, here's something you can complain about: Our penchant for hurricanes, like last week's Category 4 Matthew, might be making us abuse drugs and alcohol.
A study released yesterday in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease showed that substance abuse jumped in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. More specific, hospitalizations for
"We found that the rate of hospitalizations for substance-abuse disorders increased in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina," the study's authors, which included a few University of Miami scientists, wrote. "This result is not surprising given that a large segment of the local population experienced trauma, which had the potential to increase hospitalization rates at the same time that the city’s population was reduced."
Addiction experts such as the federal government's Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration have long warned that natural disasters like hurricanes and tropical storms can increase a population's risk for drug or alcohol abuse.
Addictive behavior in people prone to substance abuse is often triggered when stressful events arise — and few things are more upsetting than having your home swept away in a storm surge.
But yesterday's study confirmed that scientists are able to predict which areas of town will develop issues with drugs or alcohol after a tropical cyclone hits. The study says
"The Lower 9th Ward emerged as an area with high hospitalization rates post-Katrina, although it did not stand out pre-Katrina, and the Algiers region had relatively low rates compared with New Orleans as a whole," the authors write.
Before Katrina, the city's overall
The study mentions that Katrina hit the city so hard that many people moved to different areas of town or left permanently, possibly skewing the data. But those who were evacuated to Texas also reported higher substance-abuse issues, and researchers mentioned that similar results were found after Hurricane Sandy flooded parts of New York City.
"This information can help those working in disaster response to design, plan, and deploy post-disaster interventions in a spatially targeted way," the study says.
Thankfully, Miami hasn't taken a direct hit from a hurricane since 2005, when Wilma roared across the city. But given the fact that sea-level rise is already flooding huge portions of Miami Beach and the mainland, it's clear the next major storm to hit the city will be a doozy.
Unless you believe what Matt Drudge had to say about Hurricane Matthew, Miamians got insanely lucky last week when the storm missed us entirely after having destroyed parts of Haiti and Cuba. As it swung north, the storm also pounded St. Augustine, Jacksonville, and parts of North Carolina.
Next time the big one does hit, be aware that a wave of alcoholism and drug abuse might follow.