ABC News October 3, 2024

Fears for those with medical needs after Helene as search for missing continues

WATCH: Biden deploys 1,000 troops to help Helene damage

Fears for those with medical needs after Hurricane Helene are increasing as the search for missing hundreds of people still unaccounted for following the storm.

Meanwhile, the death toll from Hurricane Helene is quickly approaching 200 as President Joe Biden has deployed up to 1,000 active-duty troops to support the North Carolina National Guard in Helene's aftermath.

“The nation has your back. We’re not leaving ‘til you’re back on your feet completely,” President Joe Biden said on Wednesday after surveying the mass destruction from the storm in North and South Carolina.

MORE: 'Hold on to that hope': Urgent search for missing after Helene continues

Helene is now the deadliest mainland hurricane to strike the United States since Katrina in 2005 which claimed the lives of nearly 1,400 people.

More than a million people still don’t have power and a nearly completely dark strip marks the path of Helene through the Southeast as the crisis over getting access to drinkable water is growing.

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Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
President Joe Biden attends a briefing on the Hurricane Helene response at the Emergency Operations Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, October 2, 2024.
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Vice President Kamala Harris met with local authorities and grieving families in Augusta, Georgia, on Wednesday.

“It is particularly devastating in terms of the loss of life that this community has experienced, the loss of normalcy,” Harris said.

Elsewhere, new video captured the moment a landslide hit a house in Newland, North Carolina, as Helene trampled the Southeast.

MORE: Man and his dog rescued from disabled boat 25 miles out to sea as Hurricane Helene fast approached
Allison Joyce/AFP via Getty Images
A cluster of broken pieces of wood from destroyed houses rest along a damaged bridge in Lake Lure, North Carolina, Oct. 2, 2024, after the passage of Hurricane Helene.
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In Fairview, North Carolina, Philip Morgan showed ABC News the system of ropes he has had to create to rappel the terrain since the bridge to his neighborhood was wiped out.

Morgan’s brother is on a ventilator and in dire need of supplies as Philip Morgan says it is only a matter of time before his brother will need to be moved.

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Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images
Marine One, carrying President Joe Biden, flies above a storm impacted area near Greenville, South Carolina, October 2, 2024.
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“[My biggest fear is] something happening to him and not being able to get out of here fast enough,” Morgan told ABC News.

Meanwhile, nearby at Mission Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina, 400 nurses arrived in buses from across the country -- even as far as Alaska -- all to lend a helping hand in the aftermath of the sheer destruction of the storm.

“They showed up with a smile on their face. Eager to help, eager just to give us a little bit of reprieve,” said Matt Alligood, a resident nurse at Mission Hospital. “So, it's … it's been amazing.”