Jolie And Pitt Aid Katrina's Kids
Activist Actors Lend Their Voices To Help Kids Hit By Gulf Hurricanes
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Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt pose for photographs with children affected by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Dec. 22, 2007. (AP)
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Jolie said her work as a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees prompted her to get involved with the CHF's effort.
"This is the largest displacement of children in my own country so I want to learn as much as possible," she said at a news conference.
A report issued earlier this month by the CHF found that 46,000 to 64,000 children affected by the hurricanes were still at risk for a host of medical, mental health and educational problems complicated by a lack of support services. In Louisiana, 54 percent of the affected children, and nearly half, 47 percent, in Mississippi, were estimated to exhibit one of three risk factors that can have long term or permanent effects on their lives: a drop in academic achievement; lost access to health care or clinically-diagnosed depression, anxiety or behavior disorder, the study showed.
"Many families are distressed about how long and difficult the recovery has been," said Dr. Irwin Redlener, president of the CHF and director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, which conducted the study.
"We're concerned that this issue has fallen off the radar screen and that, nationally, people are losing interest, saying this is a 'local' issue. We dispute that. This is a national problem and one that requires an intense and focused effort to fix," Redlener said.
Redlener said it was "unacceptable" that more than two years families were still living in federally issued travel trailers or other temporary locations. "This is an American challenge that should have been met a long time ago but hasn't."
Jolie said that in her travels she has seen many children who feel defeated.
The difference here, she said, is that children "are feisty, fun and full of pride. They know where they're going and what they're going to do. It's that kind of spirit that will help everyone get through this."
Pitt and Jolie have made New Orleans their home since the hurricanes and have been working to help the area recover.
"We're focused on community building," Pitt said. "It's not just about homes. It's not just about building. It's about the lack of focus on education and health care too."
Pitt has pledged more than $5 million to Make it Right, a project to rebuild 150 homes in the Katrina-devastated Lower 9th Ward, one of the city's most impoverished neighborhoods.
Redlener said his group and the Regional Consortium for Children in the Gulf, a coalition of several groups, have devised a "prescription for what must happen now," with proposals including:
Dr. Persharon Dixon, who leads the CHF project in Gulfport and Biloxi, Miss., said the post-Katrina-Rita stress has exacerbated children's chronic health problems such as asthma, but doctors also are seeing more prevalent instances of diabetes and hypertension in them - diseases that weren't showing up prior to the storms.
"To manage this, they need access to health care on a regular basis," Dixon said. "We also need to respond to what's going on with the parents. If we can't relieve the stress of the parents, who are worrying about whether they can put food on the table or find a place to live, we can't relieve the stress on the children."
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Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective.





"Until Katrina, I had no idea of the depth of poverty in New Orleans."
Excellent point. Everyone just knew New Orleans as a party time. Guaranteed to be on the news at Mardi Gras time. But few people who didn''t live there knew the real New Orleans. Amazed me how many people relied on public transportation. That really killed them when Katrina hit.
The world is more important than the USA. Take care of them THEN take care of our people. We don''t have any problems or issues that need to be resolved. Oh no. Everything is PERFECT & FINE here. No one needs anything.
NOTE: I''M BEING SARCASTIC HERE.
I like Pitt. Jolie...eh. I hear she was good playing journalist Daniel Pearl''s wife in that movie. (Murdered by the terrorists.) Islamic militants...what would we do without them?
Hope no hurricanes hit New Orleans for a long time.
PEACE IN 2008
Brad and Angelina are doing righteous work to make it right. I just wish our federal government would do the same on a large scale. But they won''t -- the Air Farce is too busy wasting 20 billion on unneeded spare parts. Borat said, "What a country!!" Yeah, it is.