A critical concern: pediatrician self-care after disasters
A first for this century: closing and reopening of a children's hospital during a disaster
Caring for evacuated children housed in the Astrodome: creation and implementation of a mobile pediatric emergency response team: regionalized caring for displaced children after a disaster
Challenges in meeting immediate emotional needs: short-term impact of a major disaster on children's mental health: building resiliency in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
Chronicles from out-of-state professionals: providing primary care to underserved children after a disaster: a national organization response
Critical concepts for children in disasters identified by hands-on professionals: summary of issues demanding solutions before the next one
Escaping with VLBW neonates: caring for and transporting very low birth weight infants during a disaster
Exploited Children
FEMA's organized response with a pediatric subspecialty team: the National Disaster Medical System response: a pediatric perspective
Getting kids from the Big Easy hospitals to our place (not easy): preparing, improvising, and caring for children during mass transport after a disaster
Hurricane Katrina, Children, and Pediatric Heroes: Hands-on Stories by and of Our Colleagues Helping Families During the Most Costly Natural Disaster in US History
Moving hospitalized children all over the southeast: interstate transfer of pediatric patients during Hurricane Katrina
Pediatricians' experiences 80 miles up the river: Baton Rouge pediatricians' experiences meeting the health needs of evacuated children
Responding creatively to family needs of hospital staff: caring for children of caretakers during a disaster
Sweating it out in a level III regional NICU: disaster preparation and lessons learned at the Ochsner Foundation Hospital
Using international practice techniques in Texas: Hurricane Katrina experiences: receiving patients in Longview, Texas, 350 miles from ground zero
What happened to children in detention? Caring for children in a Juvenile Justice System after a disaster