STLPR0%
Clinic founded to support St. Louis tornado victims’ health, housing and grieving needs expands 44%
By Elaine Cha0%
4/24/2026, 12:32:00 PM
Topics: Radio Episode
BS Summary: This article contains 20 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Emotion, Indoctrination, and Confirmation Bias, with Optimism Bias as the most egregious example at 25.3% saturation with 150 hits. Analysis detected 944 faulty-reasoning hits from 593 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 46.7% and a BS Rank of 44% (9,572 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 56.90% of the article peer group.
When an EF3 tornado tore through parts of north St.
Louis in May last year, trauma surgeon LJ Punch knew that people displaced by the storm would need food, housing help and physical and mental health care immediately.
He quickly connected with others who saw the same needs and had the resources to meet them.
That project became 314 Oasis.
Today — just a few weeks shy of a year since that destructive storm — the mobile response hub is reaching further, and deeper, to support ongoing recovery.
The ongoing expansion of 314 Oasis includes a new program, Oasis Care.
Its staff, Punch said, provides real-time care and facilitates support for longer-term needs.
“[People] didn't know if they had a case manager, [or] if they had successfully applied for rental assistance.
They weren't sure if they were still getting FEMA [aid or] how they were going to pay their utilities,” Punch said.
“I realized they didn't necessarily need another program to manage their case.
They needed a human to be present.
Oasis Care is about filling in the gaps in all the ways that people might present in crisis, and need a helping hand to both be immediately stabilized — whether that's a hotel or paying a light bill so you can get the electricity back on — [and] also helping you find out that, actually, you qualify for three things you didn't even know you could apply for."
Punch said that helping people navigate grief has become increasingly important as post-storm recovery continues.
Creating space to mourn what’s been lost has benefits for individual health.
He also stressed its role in promoting well-being at the community level.
“When we suppress grief, then we suffer from depression, [that] suppression can manifest in behaviors that really compromise our public experience, whether it be health or safety, overdose, suicide, violence between one another, reckless driving.
Crime itself can increase in the years after a devastating moment like this,” Punch said.
“Grief is the process of not being defined by our loss, [but] honoring it, recognizing it, making space for it and gathering together.”
Punch finds affirmation in seeing how many people continue to contribute to the recovery efforts.
At the same time, he said he is dismayed by the seeming conflict between that desire and the lack of funding from the City of St.
Louis for public health and safety.
He sees the greatest opportunity now in the city’s fiscal 2027 budget and Rams settlement funds.
“We need courageous, innovative ways of thinking about local investment and true, actual, real community development so that we can get the job done,” Punch said.
“We are at an absolute crossroads right now in the region, and I'm excited to be part of an effort that is putting out the hope that something can be done, and insisting that people are worth it.”
To learn more about 314 Oasis’ expansion, including what inspired 314 Oasis’ Park2Park remembrance and program, and stories about the clinic’s ongoing work and impact in Fountain Park and O’Fallon Park, listen to St.
Louis on the Air on Apple Podcast, Spotify, or YouTube or click the play button below.
“St.
Louis on the Air” brings you the stories of St.
Louis and the people who live, work and create in our region.
The show is produced by Miya Norfleet, Emily Woodbury, Danny Wicentowski, Elaine Cha and Alex Heuer.
Layla Halilbasic is our production assistant.
The audio engineer is Aaron Doerr.
Analysis
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