University of Hawaiʻi researchers launch study of Lahaina wildfire and its impact on residents

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Aerial view of the Lahaina wildfire aftermath. (8.11.23) PC: DLNR Hawaiʻi

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa researchers are undertaking a five-year, $3.8 million study of government’s response to the Lahaina wildfire disaster and its impact on residents.

With the one-year anniversary approaching next month, the university said the study funded by the National Institutes of Health will look at how the government  impacted the physical and mental health needs of affected residents and how cultural insensitivities and related factors worsened pre-existing health disparities for Lahaina’s Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, Filipino and Mexican communities.

The fire killed at least 102 people, displaced an estimated 14,000 residents and worsened problems in a community already struggling with healthcare provider shortages, with many residents on Medicaid and reliant on other social services, according to an announcement of the study.

The two-phase study, “Population Health and Health System Resiliency Following Maui’s Wildfire Disaster,” is being led by Alex Ortega, dean of the UH Mānoa Thompson School of Social Work & Public Health, and Keawe‘aimoku Kaholokula, professor and chair of the Department of Native Hawaiian Health in UH Mānoa John A. Burns School of Medicine.

“There is a general perception that everything related to the wildfire, from disaster preparedness to the response and recovery, to communications, could have been better. We want to see if the data support those perceptions,” Ortega said. “The ultimate goal of the study is to strengthen the resiliency of not just our communities and families but also our governmental agencies and emergency healthcare systems so that we can respond and recover better from future disasters.”

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The study’s first phase is already underway. It is collecting data to qualitatively understand the physical and mental health impacts and all of the contributing factors. The second phase will focus on the barriers to health services, circumstances that led to increased health risks and how health care services were used before and after the fire, and the relation to age, ethnicity, residence and Medicaid eligibility.

Both phases will include a community advisory board representing various Maui-based stakeholders including community and government leaders, state Health Department and emergency service representatives, schools, traditional healers and health providers. 

“We’re really engaging community folks, stakeholders, those who are directly impacted by the fires who lost their homes, who lost their jobs, but also, we’re talking with frontline first responders,” Kaholokula said. “We want to talk to healthcare leaders and government leaders. We want to see what has been the impact, what are the things they see as ways forward that we can learn from and then put that into a larger study to really look at it more comprehensively, scientifically.”

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The researchers plan on working with students from UH Maui College to collect and analyze the data. The study comes as natural disasters, especially those attributed to human-caused climate change, are increasing in number and intensity. The fast-moving Lahaina fire was fueled by unusually strong winds, estimated to be as strong as 80 mph.

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