INTRODUCTION: To determine whether progression-free and overall survival of women with cervical cancer has changed in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina in 2005. METHODS: All patients with cervical cancer diagnosed from 2000 to 2009 were identified from Tumor Registries at Tulane Cancer Center and Medical Center of Louisiana–New Orleans. Demographics, stage, progression-free, and overall survival data were collected. Statistical analysis was done using widely accepted testing methods. RESULTS: A total of 494 patients were identified with cervical cancer during this period. Sixty-five percent (325) were diagnosed pre-Katrina (2000 to August 31, 2005) and 35% (169) were diagnosed post-Katrina (August 31, 2005–2009). No statistically significant difference in progression-free survival (27.0 compared with 31.0 months, P=.67) or overall survival (35 compared with 38 months, P=.53) was identified. Furthermore, no change was identified in incidence of stage IVB cervical cancer pre-Katrina compared with post-Katrina (23/325 [7%] compared with 17/169 [10%]; P=.29). CONCLUSION: There was no change in outcome in patients with cervical cancer with respect to stage, progression-free, or overall survival in the years after Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. This is in contrast to reported declines in outcome noted in other health care measures, including cardiovascular and psychiatric disorders, in the same time period. Possible reasons include the pathophysiologic course of cervical neoplasia, which typically requires decades to progress to cancer, or the relatively poor outcome associated with cervical cancer in New Orleans for many years before Hurricane Katrina. In contrast to other reported health care declines, identification of changes in cervical cancer outcomes may require much longer and more complex studies.