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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050909/ap_on_re_us/katrina_mississippi_health_hk2_1;_ylt=ApvMVrAFaZncZgL5Od67F0QbLisB;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
Miss. Residents Say Health Warning Lacking
Quote 1 BILOXI, Miss. - The neighborhood called Point Cadet at the east end of Biloxi has no clean running water and a foul stench the residents are certain it's human decay pervades the air, burning the throat when the wind blows right. In addition to the many hurricane-flattened houses no one could live in, there are some still standing, though heavily damaged. And people are staying in them, in some of the most unsanitary conditions imaginable. "This is a public health nightmare," said Dr. Mary Wells, a pediatrician from Mobile, Ala., who used her day off to drive Biloxi's debris-strewn streets to see what people need. She found squalor and desperation. She saw people who can't get medicine, who are drinking contaminated water, who have untreated cuts and bruises from a night battling Hurricane Katrina, who don't have badly needed insulin.
Quote 2 ......Evan said she saw people swimming in the reeking, polluted East Pearl River, which serves as the state's southwestern border with Louisiana. Sgt. Chuck Strain, who patrols the river for Louisiana's Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, wrinkles his nose at the thought, pointing to a blob of fur in the water. It is, he says, a roughly 10-pound nutria rat. "There's millions of them dead out there," he said. "They're floating around with their little legs sticking up in the air and their little yellow teeth showing." Sgt. Grady Brecheen said two of his agents have been hospitalized with dysentery. Both were in the flood waters in New Orleans. "I think it's going to get bad," he said. "I really do."
Miss. Residents Say Health Warning Lacking
Quote 1 BILOXI, Miss. - The neighborhood called Point Cadet at the east end of Biloxi has no clean running water and a foul stench the residents are certain it's human decay pervades the air, burning the throat when the wind blows right. In addition to the many hurricane-flattened houses no one could live in, there are some still standing, though heavily damaged. And people are staying in them, in some of the most unsanitary conditions imaginable. "This is a public health nightmare," said Dr. Mary Wells, a pediatrician from Mobile, Ala., who used her day off to drive Biloxi's debris-strewn streets to see what people need. She found squalor and desperation. She saw people who can't get medicine, who are drinking contaminated water, who have untreated cuts and bruises from a night battling Hurricane Katrina, who don't have badly needed insulin.
Quote 2 ......Evan said she saw people swimming in the reeking, polluted East Pearl River, which serves as the state's southwestern border with Louisiana. Sgt. Chuck Strain, who patrols the river for Louisiana's Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, wrinkles his nose at the thought, pointing to a blob of fur in the water. It is, he says, a roughly 10-pound nutria rat. "There's millions of them dead out there," he said. "They're floating around with their little legs sticking up in the air and their little yellow teeth showing." Sgt. Grady Brecheen said two of his agents have been hospitalized with dysentery. Both were in the flood waters in New Orleans. "I think it's going to get bad," he said. "I really do."