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« Iran: Ahmadinejad and the Labour Movement | Main | Haiti: Josh Shahryar's News LiveBlog (19/20 January) »
Wednesday
Jan202010

Haiti: Josh Shahryar's Humanitarian LiveBlog (19/20 January)

EA's Josh Shahryar updates on overnight developments on the humanitarian front in Haiti, complementing his News LiveBlog:

0450 GMT

Doctors Without Broders (MSF) has released a video showing there activities on the ground in Haiti. (Warning, the images are disturbing.)

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzEar6aCTxQ[/youtube]

0409 GMT

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) report on their day’s work in Haiti:

Loris De Filippi, the coordinator for MSF’s work in Choscal hospital in Cite Soleil, says the situation is dire: “Every time we go out of the operating theatre, we see faces imploring us for treatment. And they are begging us there in front of the hospital. It’s a very unacceptable situation. What we are trying to do is to expand our capacity to answer these calls. But we need supplies to get to the airport—and we don’t know why the planes are being re-directed.”

In Carrefour hospital, Paul McMaster, a surgeon, says that the needs are all too obvious: “We’ve not been able to get the equipment we need in the hospital because of these delivery problems. We’re running out. On Saturday we didn’t have one of our anesthetists. We’ve run out of plaster of Paris for fractures and we’ve no crepe bandages at the moment. So it’s just a nightmare to get these basic materials.”

MSF is currently operating in a host of locations in and around the capital. More than 1,500 patients have received treatment at an MSF hospital in Martissant, to name just one, and 120 of them are receiving inpatient care. MSF recently began working in Port-au-Prince’s General Hospital, where staff found a working dialysis machine and immediately began putting it to use. MSF’s nephrology team carried out its first treatment on Monday and will expand their work when new dialysis machines arrive by road from the Dominican Republic. After numerous delays, the construction of an inflatable hospital has finally begun as well; when complete, it will have room for 100 beds and will house two operating theatres.

In Leogane, one of the hardest hit towns outside the capitol, a team is working in a nursing school where, prior to MSF’s arrival, the staff had been struggling to provide basic care. Another team in Leogane is preparing four surgical wards in what was a missionary hospital to accept the large number of referral cases in the area. In Jacmel, another battered town, an MSF team is performing surgery in the hospital’s operating theater.

0334 GMT

Nate Loucks has an urgent appeal for transportation to Jacmel, southwest of Port-au-Prince from Santo-Domingo.

Kristine Brite writes:

We’ve got a team of doctors/nurses in the DR. Plane broke. Can’t get to Jacmel, Haiti now. Do you know anyone that can help?

Confirmed on his blog:


http://www.nateloucks.com/?p=395

If you know of anyone going from DR to Jacmel, write me and I will coordinate with Nate Loucks.

Contact Kristin or Nate on Twitter by clicking HERE and HERE if you can help provide transporation for these doctors. As you know, lives depend on them in Haiti.

Read LiveBlog....

Reader Comments (4)

Hola, tenemos camioneta grande y gente de nuestra ciudad (cerca de Santo Domngo) quisieran donar comida, agua y cosas necesarias. Es posible llegar a Haiti? Podriamos tambien llevar para atras a la republica dominiicana gente que necesitan ayuda.

January 20, 2010 | Unregistered Commentertereza

Hello, we live in Dominican Republic, closed to Santo Domingo. People from our town would like to donate some food, water and other necessary provisions. Please, let me know if it is possible to get there with a big van. We could also get back some people needing medical help. Thanks a lot, Tereza

January 20, 2010 | Unregistered Commentertereza

Tereza,

Thank you. Have written to Josh Shahryar to see what can be done.

S.

January 20, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterScott Lucas

Hi tereza,

Do you have any contact information? I would like to put you in touch with some charities who could possibly help you get those supplies through.

Thank you so much for the concern.

Josh

January 20, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterJosh Shahryar

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