Your privacy is our policy. See our new Privacy Policy.


New Orleans doctor answers call to serve after hurricane

E. Dwight Franklin helps with the gutting of his parents’ home in New Orleans six months after Hurricane Katrina. Virginia Tech student Ivy Gorman (background) was part of a team from her school working through the Louisiana United Methodist Storm Recovery Center during their spring vacation. A UMNS photo by Mike DuBose.

Key points:

  • Dr. Susan Berry was leaving New Orleans with her family to escape Hurricane Katrina, but she felt called to stay and help during the public health crisis that followed.
  • She was asked to go to Lake Charles to direct a special-needs shelter, which then had to relocate to Shreveport ahead of Hurricane Rita.
  • Since it all happened, Berry said every day she is determined to squeeze something good out of her experience

Dr. Susan Berry and her husband, Dr. Richard Oberhelman, both retired pediatricians, were leaving New Orleans to escape Hurricane Katrina with their three children and several pets when they started hearing about the public health crisis in Louisiana because of the pending hurricane.

“They were calling for doctors, and I said to my husband, ‘We can’t ignore this. This is the biggest health crisis in history as far as public health crisis and we are both in public health,’” Berry recalled.

As director for children with special health care needs, she was asked to go to Lake Charles to direct a special-needs shelter.

The family drove to Lake Charles, over 200 miles from New Orleans. A Lake Charles family who wanted to help offered to share their house. It was a bonus that the husband was a veterinarian and housed their pets at his practice.

“I was pretty much living at the shelter with 24 hours on and 24 hours off,” Berry said.

The shelter was in the Stokes Auditorium of McNeese University in Lake Charles.

“The special-needs shelters were part of disaster planning for the state,” she said. The shelter was put together on the spot with cots, nurses and doctors who could meet the needs of people with disabilities and chronic medical conditions — the types of needs that prohibit them from general shelters.

“During the two-and-a-half weeks in Lake Charles, our kids got settled in school and our son got to play on a Division V football team at the local high school. He even made a tackle on the field (his first)!”

Dr. Sue Berry (left) visits with Saegan Swanson at Luke’s House, a free health clinic in New Orleans. Berry served as the clinic’s first medical director following Hurricane Katrina, and Swanson is the current executive director. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.
Dr. Sue Berry (left) visits with Saegan Swanson at Luke’s House, a free health clinic in New Orleans. Berry served as the clinic’s first medical director following Hurricane Katrina, and Swanson is the current executive director. Photo by Mike DuBose, UM News.

After almost a week in the city, a physician offered the family a vacant house to stay in because all the hotels were full of evacuees.

“Richard took me to see it after a very late shift. It was beautiful but had no furniture and smelled. I thought it would never work,” she said. “But that Labor Day weekend, five families got together, cleaned the house and donated furniture, beds, linens, and even filled the fridge for us.”

There were daily conference calls with the state’s medical team. When it looked like Hurricane Rita was aiming for Lake Charles, she was asked to move the Lake Charles shelter almost 200 miles to Shreveport.

“When asked if I would take the shelter to Shreveport and direct it, I said (I would do it) for a week. My kids just got into school, and we are settled in Lake Charles.”

But when Rita hit — 26 days after Katrina — it blew the roof off the shelter and put a large hole in the roof of the house that was donated to the family.

“Richard and the kids had to find a hotel in Shreveport while I led the caravan from the Lake Charles shelter to the Civic Center in Bossier City,” she said.

“Now, talk about living on a prayer. I had some good volunteer doctors with me and we lead this caravan from Lake Charles to Shreveport with six ambulances and six school buses loaded with patients and medical staff.

Subscribe to our
e-newsletter

Like what you're reading and want to see more? Sign up for our free UM News Digests featuring important news and events in the life of The United Methodist Church.

Keep me informed!

“There were two doctors in the front — praying the whole time.”

She directed that shelter until her husband called with a desperate plea: “I’ve been living in this hotel room with three kids, two dogs, a cat and two gerbils. I can’t take it anymore.”

Berry found a volunteer replacement to take over the Shreveport shelter after about 18 days.

They returned to the Lake Charles house to collect their things. Hurricane Rita had torn big sections off the roof, exposing the house to the outside.

“We slept in the house for one night, with no electricity, and ate at a food pantry set up by a local church,” she said.

Oberhelman found a house one of his faculty members offered on Prytania Street in New Orleans. They stayed there about six weeks until their family home got its electrical power restored.

“Our house was ready to move into with no gas, but it was livable, two days before Thanksgiving,” she said. “We borrowed four space heaters to keep warm.” The family came back to their home church of Rayne Memorial United Methodist.

Berry said she still has flashbacks of that time in Shreveport.

“I remember every time a bus of patients would arrive from the shelter, they’d say, ‘OK, the alive patients are in the front, and the dead bodies are in the back. Where’s your nearest morgue?’

“I mean, it was that graphic. After a while, you got immune and act like you do in an ER.”

Since it all happened, Berry said every day she is determined to squeeze something good out of her experience — and there have been some good things.

She is still a member of Rayne Memorial and was on the outreach committee during the time of the storm.

She was a professor at Louisiana State University in New Orleans until she retired in 2021. Her clinical practice was in developmental pediatrics. She has a master’s in Public Health and over the years held director positions in public health, first in the New Orleans Health Department and then the Louisiana Office of Public Health, both as contracts from LSU. She was the director for the state’s Children with Special Health Care Needs programs.

Oberhelman is a pediatrician and professor in the Tulane School of Public Health and is the associate dean for Global Health.

Church’s light shines bright in New Orleans


In the early days of Katrina recovery, Rayne Memorial United Methodist became a hub for housing and deploying volunteer teams that came to muck and gut the houses around New Orleans.

Gilbert is a freelance writer in Nashville, Tennessee, who covered the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina for UM News in 2005.

News media contact: Julie Dwyer at newsdesk@umnews.org. To read more United Methodist news, subscribe to the free UM News Digests.

Sign up for our newsletter!

Subscribe Now
Faith Stories
The Rev. Andy Oliver (left) of Allendale United Methodist Church in St. Petersburg, Fla.,  prays with Luis Blanco in front of the Tampa immigration office on Jan. 30, 2018. The congregation supported Blanco and his family during his deportation proceedings. Oliver continues to be in ministry with marginalized communities in Florida, including helping to lead weekly protests at detention centers in the state that are housing suspected undocumented immigrants. File photo courtesy of the Rev. Andy Oliver.

Pastor emulates Wesley in Florida

The Rev. Andy Oliver’s journey from burnt-out pastor to passionate activist has taken some interesting stops, including public relations and tending bar.
Worship
Mary Spurgeon stops to listen to the sounds of nature during Wild Worship, an outdoor gathering offered by her church, First United Methodist of Omaha. Video image by Lilla Marigza, UM News.

Taking worship into the wild

Individuals are heading to the woods to connect with God in nature. This unique worship experience is a ministry of First United Methodist Church of Omaha, Nebraska.
Global Health
Staff with the Zimbabwe Entomological Support Program in Malaria stand inside the insectary at Africa University in Mutare, Zimbabwe, during a rededication of its research lab on Aug. 27. The program was shut down earlier this year after funding from USAID was suspended. From left are Sungano Mharakurwa, Vuyisile Mthokozisi Mathe, Joseph Makanda, Fanuel Toto, Hieronymo Masendu, Petros Kawadza and Violla Chimwayi. Photo by Ben Smith, UM News.

Africa University restarts malaria program

With funding support from the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, Africa University reopened a research lab after the U.S. aid withdrawal left life-saving work in jeopardy.

United Methodist Communications is an agency of The United Methodist Church

©2025 United Methodist Communications. All Rights Reserved