It was a balmy January afternoon 5 years ago (January 12)
when the world lost contact with Port au Prince. For me it started out as just another day in
Santo Domingo with a seemingly unremarkable earthquake on my way home from work.
Yesterday in the late afternoon as I looked over the
peaceful parking lot in front of Hôpital Adventiste I thought back on the
hundreds of injured victims who poured through the front gate of the hospital
with life threatening injuries.
People
were laying everywhere interspersed with a few dead bodies.
Some had mattresses pulled off of beds in the
hospital but most were just on cardboard or nothing at all.
A tent was created out of some tarps in the
front yard where wound debridements and amputations were performed while
aftershocks continued to shake the building.
Both local and international volunteers soon began to arrive and do what
they could to help.
Initially it was
difficult to triage, organize and prioritize, but in reality it was not long
before this hospital became a veritable beehive of activity and developed a strong
national reputation for orthopaedic surgery.
An unprecedented amount of donor support brought in the materials and
expertise needed to maintain the hospital.
Patients were coming from near and far.
Many with medical issues long pre dating the earthquake.
Operations were offered for free to all
comers.
This was the honeymoon of a mission hospital program - the
beginning of a long-term relationship. It was not just a one-night stand of
volunteer passion that would leave Haiti in a lurch and justify the American
dream for those who came to help. As
with any relationship it has not always been smooth sailing, but in spite of
its struggles the romance continues to motivate us. We are committed for the long term and great
effort is required in order to successfully face the realities of financial
viability, communication, and oneness of purpose.
It can be discouraging to face the literal and figurative
piles of stuff and issues around here but it is all worth it when we remember
the real reasons we are here.
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Chadme a 15 year old girl who was in a wheelchair due to severe knock knees caused by rickets |
Julie a 15 year old girl with post traumatic deformity from earthquake fracture before and after correction with TSF
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Kenn a 8 year old boy with L tibia bone deficit due to osteomyelitis. He has had a bone transport procedure to grow 2 inches of new bone and dock the nonunion site while correcting the deformity. |
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Nelson operating in the provisional operating room. Yes we spent Saturday night cleaning up the mess in the foreground. |
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Elaine Lewis surgical tech and mother of 7 from Redlands who will be living at HAH with her husband for the next 6 months and organizing our operating room. |
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The new operating room. Finish date TBD. Container with equipment is still in the port |
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Recovery room |
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New lab |
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Interview with Dr. Nancy Snyderman medical correspondent for NBC |
From NBCNews.com...
Haiti 5 Years After Deadly Earthquake
http://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/haiti-5-years-after-deadly-earthquake-n284141
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Our host Patrick |