The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sick, frail struggle after storm

Fragile support networks broken. Army of volunteers fan out to check on shut-ins, others.

- By David B. Caruso Associated Press

NEW YORK — Some of the region’s most vulnerable people — the elderly, the disabled and the chronicall­y ill — have been pushed to the brink in the powerless, flood-ravaged neighborho­ods struggling to recover from Superstorm Sandy.

The storm didn’t just knock out electricit­y and destroy property when it came ashore in places like the Far Rockaway section of Queens. It disrupted the fragile support networks that allowed the neighborho­od’s frailest residents to get by.

Here, the catastroph­e has closed pharmacies, kept home care aids from getting to elderly clients and made getting around in a wheelchair impossible. The city has recorded at least two deaths of older men in darkened buildings.

For some living in the disaster zone, it has all been too much.

When a team of medics and national guardsmen turned up at Sheila Goldberg’s apartment tower in Far Rockaway on Friday to check on the well-being of residents, floor by floor, the 75-yearold burst into tears and begged for help caring for her 85-year-old husband.

“This is a blessing. I’m at my wit’s end,” she sobbed.

Her husband, Irwin, needs her help to do almost everything. When the power was on, Goldberg said, “I could take care of him by myself and survive.” But for days, the building had no heat or electricit­y. There were no open stores to buy food. Until the end of the week, there was no water or elevators either, meaning residents like the Goldbergs, on the 25th floor, had to cart water up the steps themselves just to flush the toilet.

“I’m running out of my blood pressure medication. We’re both going to drop dead in this apartment,” Sheila said. The medical team said it would make arrangemen­ts to transfer Irwin to a medical facility, at least temporaril­y.

City and federal officials, and a growing army of volunteers, are trying hard to make sure families like that don’t fall into despair. Their efforts come alongside relief workers, donations, volunteers and demolition crews who flocked to New York and New Jersey in recent days to assist in the massive cleanup.

Paramedics from all over the country, including the ones that found the Goldbergs, fanned out across the Rockaways this weekend to check on shut-ins and anyone else who might need help.

The idea was to find people who “sheltered in place” during the storm, who might need assistance, said Nancy Clark, an assistant commission­er in the city’s health department.

The going was slow. In their first three hours, the teams had gone through five high-rise towers. Several people were taken to the hospital.

Others were hooked up with water, food, blankets, or needed prescripti­on medication­s.

Two floors below the Goldbergs, medics from South Carolina found Daisy Nixon, 70, slumped in a chair under a pile of blankets. A diabetic and a victim of two strokes, she was suffering from an untreated dislocated shoulder injured before the storm. Nate Thompson, an EMT, checked her blood glucose levels and found them troublingl­y high.

“It’s been cold. Lord, have mercy,” Nixon said. She said she was also having trouble breathing at night. When Thompson said he would get her an ambulance, Nixon was overjoyed.

“Can I kiss you? Don’t you walk away from me,” she said, and planted a smooch on his cheek.

Neighborho­od resident, Joseph Williams, said that the home care aide who normally helps look after his 27-year-old son, who has cerebral palsy and needs a wheelchair, hasn’t been able to visit since the storm.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED ?? Residents search through donated clothing piles in the Rockaways in the Queens borough of New York. Despite power returning to many neighborho­ods in the metropolit­an area after Superstorm Sandy crashed into the Eastern Seaboard, many residents of the...
JOHN MINCHILLO / ASSOCIATED Residents search through donated clothing piles in the Rockaways in the Queens borough of New York. Despite power returning to many neighborho­ods in the metropolit­an area after Superstorm Sandy crashed into the Eastern Seaboard, many residents of the...

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