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What’s the Formula for Community Resilience? [RWJF.org]

 

Few of us have forgotten the searing images of the impact of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, especially how the great American City of New Orleans was left in shambles—a testament to longstanding social and economic problems that preceded the storm and a nation that was unprepared after it occurred.

In the decade that followed Katrina—one that included the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history—recovery across the region has varied, but there have been several success stories. For example, New Orleans, that soulful town, overhauled its health and public health systems, improved access to nutritious food and fitness activities, and put new emphasis on issues of equity and poverty. The work is far from done, but the transformation was sufficient to earn aCulture of Health Prize from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) in 2013.

Advancing the Science of Healthy Communities

We urgently need to understand the confluence of factors that helps communities of all sizes to recover and thrive. Throughout the Gulf region, communities large and small have come together to tackle adversity in its many forms—environmental disasters, to be sure, but also violence, chronic poverty and other traumas. The nation could learn from their efforts about what nurtures resilience—that is, the capacity to prepare for, withstand and recover from acute and chronic adversity and emerge stronger than ever.

[For more of this story, written by Tracy Costigan, go to http://www.rwjf.org/en/culture..._s_the_formulaf.html]

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Be involved in community by presence and by service.  I have been doing this for many years and have found how I am blessed by seeing a return on that presence and service.  I have helped people who have later come and thanked me for standing with them on their worst days.  And they have said they owe it to me that they now have their kids back, or that they are celebrating long recovery.  The people I helped are the ones that did the work, but I was the catalyst, and we the people can do a better job standing with our neighbors and community members as family and sharing each others load.  Are we too afraid that others problems will impact us if we get involved?  For certain they will and are because we're not.  We need to balance government support with community support.  We are really neglecting the community aspect and need to bring some attention to that crisis.  We can't be having a government growing to fix problems that should be done through community resiliency, and stop allowing fear to drive our decisions.  States that are focusing on strengthening community support and repairing broken infrastructure are more healthy than the ones who are not.

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