The Commercial Appeal

People with illnesses face threat

Losing power can ‘be a matter of life and death’

- N’dea Yancey-bragg

For Hannah Giffin, electric power is as critical as the air she breathes.

The 24-year-old who was recently diagnosed with four new chronic illnesses relies on an oxygen concentrat­or to help her breathe, but when the power went out Tuesday in San Marcos, Texas, she was forced to ration her oxygen.

“It's been emotionall­y exhausting,” she said. “Not knowing if we're going to have power to supply my ability to breathe is terrifying.”

No emergency services could refill her oxygen tanks and because her lung disease puts her at high risk for COVID-19, going to the hospital wasn't an option. Feeling isolated and hopeless, she and her mother, Kristin, turned to social media to try to get a generator or oxygen tanks from FEMA.

“My husband and I were just beside ourselves,” Kristin Giffin said. “We can't sleep because we're thinking about what happens to her if her oxygen runs out.”

Freezing temperatur­es and winter storms have caused widespread power outages across the country leaving people with disabiliti­es and chronic illnesses scrambling to find ways to access life-saving medical supplies and charge devices they depend on.

For people with disabiliti­es and chronic health conditions, losing power can “be a matter of life and death,” according to Jane Buchanan, acting director of the disability rights division at Human Rights Watch.

Earlier in the week, more than 4 million in Texas alone didn't have electricit­y after large shares of the state's power plants were kicked off its grid. More than 1 million people were without power Thursday, including more than 400,000 customers in Texas, and widespread outages were reported in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississipp­i, Kentucky and Oregon.

The winter weather has claimed as many as 36 lives this week, some of

whom died while struggling to find warmth inside their homes.

Older people, people with chronic conditions and people with disabiliti­es will likely be disproport­ionately impacted by the outages, advocates say.

“Losing electricit­y just exacerbate­s the inequaliti­es that already exist for marginaliz­ed people, but specifically for those that are energy-dependent, transporta­tion-dependent, healthcare-dependent,” Stephanie Duke, an attorney at Disability Rights Texas said. “It's the mechanisms and processes we have in place that create more barriers.”

The disability community has a diverse set of needs that could be impacted by the loss of power and water. Electricit­y is needed to power medical devices like motorized wheelchair­s, CPAP machines and respirator­s. Poor weather can also prevent people from getting refills for essential medication and caretakers from reaching patients.

In Texas, while larger hospitals and facilities are fairing better, people who live alone or in smaller nursing homes and assisted living facilities are stuck without supplies, according to Duke.

Duke, also a disaster resilience fellow at Equal Justice Works, said that Texas has seen huge demand for generators,

oxygen and transporta­tion to warming centers. If they have a serious medical need, people with disabiliti­es may have to go to a hospital, which could come with unforeseen costs.

That was the case for Ashlynn Hoffner, 32, who was forced to call an ambulance after the battery on her partner's oxygen machine ran low.

KD Hoffner, 31, is chronicall­y ill with heart and kidney problems requiring dialysis every few days and an oxygen concentrat­or to breathe. Their concentrat­or must be constantly plugged in and would only last a few hours on backup power after the electricit­y went out at 2:30 a.m. Monday. Hoffner, who works for IBM, guided emergency service workers through her dark home in Richardson. The pair spent the next few days staying with friends and at a shelter and making long drives in icy conditions for dialysis appointmen­ts.

“I'm happy to have been able to keep them stable. That was very uncertain for the first day,” Ashlynn Hoffner said.

While the power is back on in their apartment, they don't have water and Hoffner said they've received little help from the local government.

“I won't lie, it is very frustratin­g,” she said. “It feels like the government response to this has either been ambivalent or just outright hostile.”

Mila Clarke Buckley, a 31-year-old living with Type 1.5 diabetes, also expressed frustratio­n at the lack of communicat­ion from local authoritie­s. She said although she learned how to prepare for natural disasters like hurricanes while living in Houston, no one warned her of the severity of the winter storm.

If her insulin is not stored at a specific temperatur­e, it must be used within 28 days. When she realized she would be without consistent power for days, she worried that much of her $1,200 3month supply would go to waste.

“That's when I think I started to panic,” Buckley said. “It didn't seem like there was any end in sight.”

To keep the medication cool she put it outside in an Amazon box with ice packs and a Bluetooth thermomete­r, normally used for grilling, and monitored the temperatur­e remotely on her phone. Although her temporary fix worked, she's worried about keeping it up as the temperatur­es change.

“There was a certain point I just wanted to give up,” she said.

The “massive” lack of preparatio­n is a result of federal, state and local officials failing to engage with organizati­ons led by people with disabiliti­es, according to Germán Parodi, co-executive director of the Partnershi­p for Inclusive Disaster Strategies.

Parodi said the FEMA office responsibl­e for the safety of Americans with disabiliti­es has reduced its staff dramatical­ly in the past five years, and local officials have failed to invite people with disabiliti­es to the planning and response process. “The disability community in Texas has been ignored,” he said.

For the Giffins, power is back on and if it goes out again, a stranger from Austin has offered to deliver them a generator. Kristen Giffin said the outpouring of support from the community has been “overwhelmi­ng,” and she's looking into starting a nonprofit to deliver generators to people who rely on oxygen concentrat­ors.

“I think a lot of good is born out of tragedy,” she said. “We're interested in making that happen now.”

 ?? HANNAH GIFFIN ?? Hannah Giffin resorted to rationing her oxygen after her family lost power amid frigid weather in Texas.
HANNAH GIFFIN Hannah Giffin resorted to rationing her oxygen after her family lost power amid frigid weather in Texas.

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