JamaicaNews

Hurricane Melissa and the Future of Caribbean Health

“The experience of Hurricane Melissa should serve as a catalyst for long, overdue transformative change.”

Photo: Associated Press/Matias Delacroix/Alamy

Three months after Hurricane Melissa, a devastating Category 5 storm, carved a path of destruction across the Caribbean, the immediate emergency is subsiding. Yet, as a recent Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) report details, the storm’s aftermath reveals a far more complex and enduring challenge to the region’s health and stability. Beyond the tragic loss of 88 lives and the extensive damage to 785 health facilities, the hurricane has exposed the profound vulnerabilities that lie at the intersection of: climate change, infrastructure, and socioeconomic well-being, forcing a critical conversation about the resilience of our health systems.

The recovery is beyond simply rebuilding. It is a confrontation with a cascade of health crises that follow in a superstorm’s wake. In Jamaica, the flooding left behind a deadly outbreak of leptospirosis, a bacterial disease spread through contaminated water, leading to 124 suspected cases and 14 deaths. This type of illness emerges when infrastructure, particularly for sanitation and safe water, is compromised.

Across the water in Cuba, the disruption created ideal conditions for vector-borne diseases to flourish. The nation is grappling with its first-ever major outbreak of chikungunya, with over 51,000 cases, alongside a surge in dengue fever. These incidents are a clear illustration of how a changing climate intensifies public health threats in a region already on the front lines.

These outbreaks are symptoms of deeper, pre-existing conditions. The PAHO report highlights that in Cuba, a strained economy and housing shortages, with over 215,000 homes damaged by the storm, have left hundreds of thousands of people in a precarious state. Nearly half a million people in the eastern part of the island were still reliant on water tanker deliveries as of late December. When people lack secure housing and safe, reliable drinking water, their vulnerability to disease multiplies exponentially. This is the social determinant story of health, where a hurricane’s impact is not in wind speed alone, but also, in the societal fault lines that it exposes.

However, the story is also one of remarkable resilience and innovation. The report notes that health facilities in Jamaica and elsewhere that were built or retrofitted to PAHO’s “Smart Hospital” standards sustained minimal damage. These facilities are designed to be both structurally sound against disasters and environmentally efficient, representing a crucial investment in future-proofing the region’s health infrastructure.

Furthermore, Jamaica’s success in containing the leptospirosis outbreak is a testament to its strong, pre-existing disease surveillance system, a capacity nurtured through years of investment and technical support. These successes provide a clear blueprint for a more resilient future.

As we move from response to recovery, the experience of Hurricane Melissa should serve as a catalyst for long, overdue transformative change. It has truly challenged us to look beyond the immediate needs of reconstruction and address the root causes of vulnerability. This requires sustained investment in public health infrastructure, from robust disease surveillance networks to climate-resilient Smart Hospitals. It demands that we tackle the socioeconomic inequalities that leave so many exposed to the worst of a disaster’s impacts. The health of the Caribbean is inextricably linked to its social and economic fabric. By strengthening this fabric, we are building a healthier, more equitable future for all.

Contributor Note:

Ika Washington is a community health specialist, doctoral student in health, and a health and social development consultant with expertise in socioeconomic determinants of health, public policy, and community engagement.

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