Tuesday, September 28, 2010

photos - storm - part 5

While we were in the Henfrasa refuge camp we saw a foreign aid organization walking through the camp. The NGO "AMI" helps out in this camp. We saw them walk with some tarps in their hands and while we were leaving a vehicle pulled in with about 20 new tent bags. It would be great if the AMI organization would be able to help out all the people in the Henfrasa camp who need new tents.

You can see how brittle the tarps are getting.

This woman has basically no protection from the rain. She almost tackled me to get me to come and visit her shelter. She latched onto my arm and wouldn't let go!

Some of the families in the camps have now lost their home for the second time. Pray for strength for these families.

This woman gave birth a week ago. She has 6 children. Her husband is in prison. We are registering 2 of the older children into our school program here at Coram Deo. They will be in Grade 1. 2 of her other children we are attempting to get accepted at the National School near the Mayor of Delmas. Hopefully this year with all the international attention on the school programs here in Haiti the public education system will improve.




photos - storm - part 6

This woman has built her shelter of pieces of scrap wood.

Some of the young men have their own pup tents. They didn't fare well in the storm.

Pray for all the young families in the camps.

These 2 families are getting together to build a "town tarp house. Each woman is standing in her section of the townhome. Both of their tents were destroyed in the storm.

Near Chancerelles Hospital off of the "Piste Road" we saw this construction in progress. It looks like some temporary homes will be built there. People can live a whole lot better in a structure like this! Pray for land to be found to build a lot of these type of homes.




Monday, September 27, 2010

ARTICLE - BUILDING BACK BETTER

PAUL FARMER: REBUILDING HAITI, BUT 'BUILDING BACK BETTER'
(CBC News) - By Jennifer Clibbon

As Haiti prepares for presidential and legislative elections at the end of November, there's pressure to speed up the slow and frustrating work of relief and reconstruction in areas devastated by January's earthquake.

The six-month anniversary of the quake came and went in June, with considerable criticism about the million-plus Haitians still stranded in tent cities and the international community's dubious commitment to deliver billions of dollars pledged for reconstruction.

There is a bold international vision for Haiti. It's described as a kind of Marshall Plan to "build back better," as the mantra goes. But achieving it is no easy task.

Among Haiti's high-profile champions are two men who shuttle continually between the embattled country and various world capitals, drumming up support and money.

The first is former U.S. president Bill Clinton, the United Nations' special envoy to Haiti. The second is his deputy, Dr. Paul Farmer, a Harvard professor and physician who fell in love with Haiti in the 1980s as a medical student and has spent the past generation working there and elsewhere, trying to bring First World health care to the very poor.

Farmer is a co-founder of the respected non-profit organization, Partners in Health, which delivers free health care to the poor in Haiti, Rwanda, Peru, Russia, Malawi and Guatemala, among other places.

Partners in Health already operates a health centre and teaching hospital in Cange, in rural central Haiti, and is constructing a new teaching hospital in Mirebelais, about 60 kilometres northeast of Port-au-Prince. When he's not in Haiti, Farmer works as a physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and teaches medical anthropology at Harvard Medical School.

His life's work inspired a Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Tracy Kidder, called Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World.

Clinton made Farmer his deputy special envoy to Haiti in 2009. Then came the earthquake and his skill set couldn't have been more useful.

Since the disaster, which killed more than 200,000 people and injured 300,000, Farmer has been helping to map out a relief and reconstruction plan. Farmer's particular concern, though, is helping Haiti to develop a national public health-care system.

Even for someone so dedicated to Haiti, it is an incredible challenge.

CBC producer Jennifer Clibbon recently interviewed Paul Farmer about the reconstruction process in Haiti and current priorities.

CBC News: You just returned from two high-profile fundraising and policy meetings in New York last week, the annual Clinton Global Initiative and the United Nations General Assembly. From your perspective, what did Haiti come away with from these meetings?

Paul Farmer: The Clinton Global Initiative conference has, as one of its chief goals, bringing together unlikely partners. People who might represent traditional philanthropy, business people, people involved in humanitarian and direct service work and political figures. So, it's a very unusual mix in my experience and, most of the time, not much comes out of that mix.

But because of the structure of the Clinton Global Initiative, where people make public commitments to do some very specific endeavours, I think we got a lot more of those.

One is that the number of people seeking to be part of the Haiti Action Network, [a group of CGI members which meets to generate projects], is growing. There are a lot more projects this year than in the previous two years.

One of the things Haiti walks away with is more people interested in responding to the challenges Haitians are facing right now. And that's a good thing.

The Clinton Global Initiative is timed to happen at the same time as the UN General Assembly. So there's a parallel set of discussions going on between nation-states and diplomats about how to help Haiti best to respond to the situation now. I think there is some good movement on policy and projects.

[At the United Nations], one of the things that may seem small but what I thought was important, was a meeting between the Rwandans and the Haitians.

Rwanda, of course, clawed its way back from absolute hell after 1994. And Haiti faces a really grim situation in terms of how many people are homeless and displaced. I'm optimistic about their collaboration.

CBC News: Clinton said in June that he wasn't happy with the progress in sorting out the tent camps. As obstacles, he cited: poor co-ordination and government direction, land ownership issues and dependency on foreign aid. It's still hurricane season. What are your worst fears for the people in tent camps? And what are some solutions in your view?

Paul Farmer: The worst fears are easy to outline. One, that there will be loss of life because of storms and flooding.

Another, that cramming over a million people into such uncomfortable and makeshift shelters is going to lead to problems in the camps themselves. It requires the patience of Job to endure those kinds of conditions.

Those all remain serious problems. And they are structurally given, in the sense of land ownership issues, because a large fraction of those people were not homeowners but renters. The reasons for returning to damaged housing to rebuild it, some of those reasons just aren't there.

People talk about dependency on foreign aid. I get that critique and have made it many times myself, but it's also true that in terms of the basic services that Haitian people have been demanding (health care, education, sanitation and water), these were not widely available to the poor, prior to the earthquake. That's another structural problem that predates the earthquake.

So moving people out of those precarious camps is going to require, as Clinton said, very co-ordinated efforts to provide services and also to create jobs, and the chance for people to own housing. Those are long-term endeavours.

CBC News: When ex-president Clinton and others talk about reconstruction in Haiti, they have used the term, "build back better." Economists like Paul Collier and many others have talked about a Marshall Plan for Haiti. Is that still the vision? And how are Haitian ideas being incorporated?

Paul Farmer: I would say that is still the ambition, to "build back better" and to have a very sweeping and well-funded plan.

Even with these massive pledges that were made at the March 31 donors' conference [at the United Nations in New York, $5.3 billion US was pledged], the amount of money per capita over the next decade, even if the pledges were met, is not large.

It comes out over the years to under a couple of hundred dollars per Haitian per year, if the pledges were met. And we know a lot of the pledges have not been met. That's something president Clinton is working on, to how to make sure those promises are kept.

A Marshall Plan is in some ways a stirring reminder of how ambitious rebuilding should be. But a lot of things have changed since the 1940s.

There wasn't the big class of contractors after World War II. Now there is a whole machinery of aid. A lot of the money, foreign aid, really doesn't get to the poorest.

For example, a lot of foreign aid never leaves the United States. That's not a great situation for Haiti right now. The job should be to move as much as possible of those pledges to create Haitian jobs. That's not really the way foreign aid is constructed now. That is going to require some reform, I think.

In my area of interest, which is public health and education, that requires a strong public sector. Haiti didn't have that before the earthquake.

About 20 per cent of its federal workforce was killed in the earthquake. Something like 28 out of 29 federal buildings were destroyed. There's really a lot of work to be done there as well.

You'd be hard-pressed to find a country in postwar Europe where that occurred, even though the losses were horrific. It [the devastation] was so concentrated in Port-au-Prince, the most heavily populated part of the country, that Haiti is still reeling from that.

How are we making sure Haitian perspectives are involved? I don't think we should give ourselves very high marks yet on that score. Because to do that, you'd have to go into the most heavily affected areas and make sure that the people living in camps, that their views are incorporated.

A lot more work needs to be done to incorporate the poor majority into the process. It's a real process, the democratic engagement of people living in these camps, people who lost homes or never owned them. Incorporating them into the process is important and needs to be stepped up.

CBC News: You've spoken about developing Haiti's first-ever comprehensive health system. You helped build a health system in Rwanda. And you've called for a Marshall Plan for health care in the developing world. Partners in Health is constructing a big new hospital and training complex in central Haiti, in Mirebelais. What is your dream and what is possible for moving toward a public health system in Haiti?

Paul Farmer: In my view, it's a dream that we know could be realized.

You are right to call it a public health plan. It's not the only kind of health plan — there is a private sector in health care. But the NGO [non-governmental organization] and humanitarian sector should, in my view, pay a lot more attention to the public health system.

That's the safety network for the majority, or it should be. So that not everything is all fee-for-service and without an insurance plan. There has to be a basic insurance plan to cover all families. Rwanda has fought hard to establish exactly such a plan.

Between 2005 and now, some basic health coverage as insurance has been extended to the majority of the Haitian population. Now, does it have problems? Yes. Does more infrastructure need to be built? Of course.

But what we've done as Partners in Health in Haiti over the past decade is to focus exclusively on helping to rebuild public-sector hospitals in central Haiti.

That's why we are building this big teaching hospital in central Haiti with the Ministry of Health, so that it fits into this co-ordinated network of public hospitals that is meant to be available to all Haitians in the area.

That's not how a lot of aid has gone into Haiti. A lot of it has gone into the NGO sector or into mission or church hospitals. They are good things to have. But the more we can co-ordinate with the public health sector, the more we'll have a safety net.

CBC News: How would this idea for a Marshall Plan for public health in the developing world be organized?

Paul Farmer: We have to be very flexible in how to administer an endeavour like that. What we described, in talking about a Peace Corps or Medical Corps, the problem there is usually that there's not enough focus placed on training in-country professionals.

Global health can't be people like my students and trainees at Harvard going to Haiti to replace and filling in gaps. It has to be aggressively linked to train local providers. That's what we are trying to do. That requires a lot of funding.

In fact, I'm going to the National Institutes of Health to talk about this topic.

There are all these levels of engagement that are necessary. One is to build a (public health-care) system. Two, to train a local workforce: that has to be doctors, nurses and community health workers who can provide health care in the village, clinic and hospital level. It would benefit from trainees, as I've been lucky enough to have at Harvard and the teaching hospital.

Finally, the system of course has to have a social security net. So, when all those layers are addressed, that's what a Marshall Plan would look like.

CBC News: The big question is: where is the money for reconstruction? Only a fraction of all pledged money from the international community has been disbursed so far. Are you starting to get worried that the money won't come through?

Paul Farmer: I've always been worried the money would never come through. This is not the first donor conference that I've attended. That's always been a concern.

CBC News: Haitian elections are coming up in late November. Over the years, you have been quite critical of foreign intervention in Haitian politics. It's a flawed political system. How do you expect the legislative and presidential elections will impact reconstruction?

Paul Farmer: My concern is that this process needs to not distract from the reconstruction.

That's a difficult thing to do. President Clinton was saying this: 'How would you like to try and rebuild Haiti, even as [it is] preparing, as the Haitian constitution requires it, elections?' My concern is that all Haitian people and parties be allowed to participate.

CBC News: The Haitians have always been praised for being so brave in this crisis. How do you think Haitians themselves evaluate the relief efforts of the UN, the international aid community and their own government?

Paul Farmer: If you are one of the one-plus million people living in those camps, you are not going to give high marks. I am not expecting that we're getting a good grade from the primary victims. We're just going to have to keep working harder to improve the quality of what we're doing.

CBC News: You've written powerfully and emotionally about Haiti for a generation. You've now been given the keys to the car. You've been given the opportunity, as special deputy envoy, to help rebuild Haiti and help bring the voices of Haitians to that process. But you have to mesh your idealism with the world of realpolitik. How is that working out?

Paul Farmer: It is a challenge to move between the worlds of the people I might serve as a physician and the world of policy-makers.

I do think that the earthquake was a wakeup call to a lot of the latter, that so far the aspirations of the great majority of Haitians have not been met. That opening, it's still not closed.

In terms of "building back better," it's not just houses and buildings. It's also the entire process of development and the involvement of the majority. That has to be "built back better" too.

I think there's a little more chance of that now, than before. I'm not suggesting that it's easy to span those worlds. I doubt it is for anybody. But there is a little more opening than before.

ARTICLE - WEIGHING THE LIVES OF BABIES

CASES WITHOUT BORDERS
WEIGHING THE LIVES OF BABIES IN HAITI
(New York Times) - By Dennis Rosen, M.D.

We were 18 doctors, nurses and other health professionals from Children’s Hospital Boston, on a nine-day mission to the General Hospital in Port-au-Prince to work with a Haitian pediatric team.

It was the first week of May, almost four months after the earthquake, and the situation remained dire. Rubble was everywhere, many buildings were unusable, and all of the pediatric care was being given in tents. Supplies were sparse and unreliable.

The obstetricians at the General were on strike, and women in labor were being told to go elsewhere. But word had gotten out that there were American doctors at the hospital, and many patients simply refused to leave.

So it was on that rainy Sunday evening that there were six women in active labor in the emergency room. And soon one of them, in her late teens, gave birth to a tiny boy, just 2 pounds 3 ounces. A neonatologist on our team estimated that he was two months premature. (The mother claimed she hadn’t even known she was pregnant.)

Premature babies can get into a lot of trouble, and the smaller they are, the higher their risk of complications. They usually have difficulty maintaining a normal body temperature, losing heat to their surroundings faster than they can generate it. This is why they are kept in incubators until they are able to stay warm on their own. They are at high risk for infections, along with feeding and breathing problems.

Once the baby was born, we dried and swaddled him and started looking for a place where he could be cared for until he was stable enough to be sent home. There were no working incubators at the hospital, nor any free beds in the pediatric tents, and we had no luck finding incubators at other hospitals.

Then an American physician at another medical camp told us that he had faced a similar situation some days before, and had built his own incubator — “MacGyver” style, as he put it. He suggested we do the same.

So that’s what we did. We took a cardboard box from the medical supply room, padded it with some surgical drapes and a blanket and found a desk lamp with a working bulb to serve as a source of heat. VoilĂ ! Our youngest patient now had an incubator.

The next morning we tried to persuade the attending Haitian pediatrician to accept the baby to the pediatric tents. “Don’t be absurd!” she scoffed, as I recall. “A baby that small will not make it. He has no chance of survival, and we have no spare beds to waste.”

None of us felt comfortable arguing with her. Still, we knew that to send the baby to his mother’s tent city while he was still so vulnerable would be a death sentence. So we decided to keep him and his mother in the emergency room until a proper place could be found — understanding that we needed to find a solution before returning to Boston, as the group that would follow us did not include pediatricians qualified to treat complications of prematurity.

A baby bottle was found, along with clothes and diapers. The nurses taught his mother how to express milk into the bottle and to feed him. We’d been calling him “baby in the box”; now he became Jack, as in Jack in the box. He did very well, and his mother, after overcoming her surprise at his unexpected appearance, bonded with and cared for him devotedly.

Each day we pressed his case to the Haitian medical team, and each day we were turned down. “There is no room for him,” we were told, though there seemed to be beds for other children in the pediatric tents.

Finally, on Friday, we found an incubator for him at another hospital. We transferred him and his mother there, satisfied that we had gotten him through those first few days, but soberly aware of the odds he faced going forward. The next day we left for Boston.

Six weeks after our return, at an informal reunion, the neonatologist told us he had learned that Jack had been discharged home with his mother in good health, weighing five and a half pounds.
We were thrilled. Our stubbornness had paid off.

But our euphoria was tempered by a somber reality. Looking at the big picture, we had to concede that the Haitian doctors were probably right.

We were in Port-au-Prince, after all, not Boston. Surely the Haitians, acutely aware of what they could and could not do with the resources they had, would know better than a group of well-intentioned foreigners accustomed to the best equipment money can buy. Didn’t it make more sense to invest time, effort and scarce resources in a baby with a better chance of surviving?

Yet ultimately this was not an abstract discussion about the proper allocation of medical resources in an impoverished country, but a decision about the fate of a baby who was very much alive. He was our patient, and we were determined to give him the best possible care.

In the little-picture view, a life had been saved.

Dr. Dennis Rosen is a pediatric pulmonologist at Children’s Hospital Boston and an instructor at Harvard Medical School.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

photos - storm - part 1

A couple of weeks ago, I asked Pastor Pierre to trim the trees that were at the front of the house. They grow quickly and were starting to grow among the electricity wires. It was a good thing they were trimmed because suddenly on Friday afternoon, out of nowhere a bad storm came with high winds and rain.

The winds were the worst I have experienced in my 14 years in Haiti. It felt like being in the middle of a hurricane. Everyone was outside and we called the children to stand under the carport and stay away from the open areas and the trees in the yard. With the wind gusting it was raining horizontally. We were worried about the refuge camps and when the winds died down we headed out in the rain to check on the camps that were near us.

The winds ripped tents apart everywhere. They aren't built to withstand strong winds like what happened Friday afternoon and with the months standing under the hot sun they also were brittle. Thousands of tents were destroyed.

Trees, branches and tin roofs were lifted off roofs off houses. Dieula is standing by a rubble pile near our house.

The refuge camp on Delmas 31 that is up the hill from our street corner suffered damage from large tree limbs falling on tents. These 2 children tried to stay dry in their tent.




photos - storm - part 2

This large limb crushed a tent below. Fortunately the woman who was nearby was only slightly injured. She had a sore arm but it didn't look broken. We brought her some ibuprofen and told her if the pain or swelling got worse to contact us and we would take her over to Medecin San Frontieres to get it checked out. The people in this camp were scared and were thankful that they were unhurt. When we were there they were praying to God and singing in the rain asking Him for protection. The Christians in Haiti know who to turn to in times of trouble. The strong winds scared the people and they felt vulnerable and exposed in their tents and tarp shelters.

We went to the Apostolique refuge camp. A tin roof had been lifted off a nearby building by the strong winds and thrown down onto this tent in the refuge camp. The woman's back was sliced open by the sharp tin. She was rushed to the Medecin Sans Frontieres Hospital where she is now recovering from her wounds. Another young woman in the tent suffered a back injury. We brought her to Medecin Sans Frontieres to get evaluated. It is amazing that nobody got killed by the roof. Pray for the 2 people who were injured in this tent; that they may recover from their wounds.

In the Cite Jeremie area this tin roof was lifted off as well as the damaged wall from the earthquake being knocked over. It fell below injuring a person. This person was brought to hospital.

You can see that this remaining portion of wall is a danger to the people who live nearby. We advised them to demolish the remainder of the wall.

Inside Cite Jeremie it is densely populated with narrow corridors. Rain waters ran through the corridors.




photos - storm - part 3

The tin roof was lifted off of Macdonald's family's home.

Rain waters swiftly ran down this ravine in Cite Jeremie.

Babies don't wait for storms and one of the women in the refuge camp on Delmas 31 was in labor and bleeding. We brought her to the Chancerelles Maternity Hospital. She had a difficult delivery and bled a lot but you can see she successfully gave birth to a 5 lb. baby boy. His name is Ivon.

We returned mother and baby back to their camp this morning. The mother was happy to be back home. The hospital wanted her to stay there for observation because she had lost quite a bit of blood but she didn't want to stay. We told her if the bleeding continues we would bring her back to the hospital. She told me not to worry and that God wouldn't let anything happen to her. Please pray for the health of this mother and her newborn baby boy.

Saturday was spent cleaning up after the storm. The children enjoyed it!