American Heart Association
NEW ORLEANS — Ten years after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, hospital admissions for heart attacks in the city were three times higher than they were before the storm, according to research presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2016.
“After Hurricane Katrina devastated our city, the cardiology department found that we had very busy on-call nights,” said Anand Irimpen, M.D., study lead author and professor of medicine at Tulane University School of Medicine and chief of cardiology at Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System. “We were being called into the hospital for heart attacks much more often than during pre-Katrina days. So, I suggested to our cardiology fellows that we study the data to look at this phenomenon objectively to determine whether this was a real increase or only a perception.”
Investigators found that hospital admissions to Tulane Medical Center for heart attacks increased three-folds in the 10 years after Katrina, compared to the two years before the storm in August 2005.
In addition, post-Katrina patients were significantly more likely to have other risk factors for heart attack, including:
- Coronary artery disease (48 percent compared to 31 percent)
- Diabetes (40 percent vs 29 percent)
- High blood pressure (81 percent vs 74 percent)
- High blood levels of cholesterol (59 percent vs 45 percent)
- Smoking (54 percent vs 39 percent)
“Although the general emphasis after an event such as Katrina is on rebuilding, we should not neglect the health of those affected by a disaster,” Irimpen said. “This massive natural disaster may have had a greater impact on the development of chronic medical diseases than originally realized.”
In other findings, the study identified additional potential health problems among the post-storm group. For example, these patients were more than twice as likely to abuse drugs and/or to have a psychiatric disease as their pre-Katrina counterparts. In addition, unemployment and a lack of health insurance were significantly more frequent among the post-Katrina group of patients. Post-Katrina patients were also more likely to receive prescriptions for heart-disease medications and drugs to lower cholesterol and high blood pressure, although they were only half as likely to take their medication, compared to the pre-Katrina group.
For this single-center study, investigators examined 150 records for heart attack patients admitted to Tulane Medical Center in the two years before Katrina, and 2,341 records in the 10 years afterward.
Since the study was observational, it only found an association between Katrina and an increase in heart attacks, not a cause of the increase. In addition to this limitation, the study involved patients at a single hospital and could not control for all possible influences on heart attack risk since data relied on medical records of past heart attacks.