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City Action Partnership

CAP and Haiti Relief

Check out our facility record in the CAT (Citizen Action Team) Relief Database.
http://citizencommandcenter.org/shelters/show/290

Cheat Sheets for the CAT Relief Database
(Files are big so may take a few minutes to come up)

Document
Cheat Sheet No. 1
Document
Cheat Sheet No. 2
Document
Cheat Sheet No. 3
For an online power point presentation about the CAT Relief Database click on this link.
http://www.reliefdatabase.org/Relief_Database_Intro.html

Because we have very limited warehouse space, we are not doing general collections.  However we are making individual first aid kits and collecting other medical supplies.  A need for these was emphasized on a MAP I(Medical Assistance Programs) International video as patients getting treated for wounds and released don't have what they need to continue their own care and often are not able to return to the clinics.

We are also working on creating the same kind of network of medical facilities as we did during Katrina to facilitate communications between the clinics themselves and organizations collecting medical supplies. 
Image: 
Click on Pictures for Captions

Image: 
Photo's from the NGO, For Haiti with Love, receiving our shipment of baby formula
in Haiti at last!

Clinics and Hospitals In Haiti

Items we Need
and Donations

(See Photos from Leogune)

Volunteer opportunities for
Doctors and Nurses


Hat's Off from CAP for the
Community's Support



If you like to surf the net
for information,
volunteer with us!!! 
Contact Laura at
capbham@aol.com



 


Updates     (Note:  PAP stands for Port au Prince)

10/24/10:  Another delay in posting.  So much happens, it's just hard to keep up.  I sent an email out with information about the Cholera Epidemic in Haiti that is below, but I wanted to also let you know the following:

* We did get the supplies UAB School of Nursing collected for the Haiti School of Nursing to the School!  (2 boxes of underwear and socks, 1 box of new uniforms, 1 box of toiletry items, 3 boxes of gently used scrubs and nursing shoes, 1 box of first aid supplies AND a thumb drive with Nursing Books in French- thank you UAB and John Hopkins!)  This was done via a wonderful new partner, Bahamas Habitat (no relation to Habitat for Humanity).  They are coordinating flights of supplies and patients within Haiti.  They hooked us up with a pilot from Cullman, Jon Short.  Jon and his daughter, Hayden, even came to my house to pick up some supplies!!!

* Jon, the pilot, then hooked us up with another Alabama group called SIFAT (Service in Faith and Technology) who have been working in Haiti installing water purification systems and training.  I introduced them to the database and hooked them up with Bahamas Habitat for transportation to and within Haiti. 

* Jon also hooked me up with an orthopedic surgeon and I was able to send him a donation of surgical screws I got from a post I put out on the DOT Med web site.  It was a small box, but worth a lot of money!

*Jon has a bunch of our boxes ready to go down to Haiti with supplies donated from UAB Hospital that we had in the warehouse as well as my old printer earmarked for the Cap Haitien Health Network's warehouse.  I'm hoping that will go down soon.

*Our "Relief Van" has finally gone to the scrape yard.  The money we got for it will go to shipping supplies.   It needed a $1500 brake job and we just didn't have the money.  We are sure going to miss that van!!!  If anybody has a working van they want to donate, please let me know.  It's tax deductable. :-)

*PLEASE join our collection campaign to help with the Cholera Outbreak in Haiti.


“Cholera Hospital is a Horror Scene” (see article below)  You've probably heard about it on the news- if not, here is a good update including a video on U-tube.  http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/10/23/1887953/more-haitians-sickened-by-Cholera.html?asset_id=1887001&asset_type=gallery

We know how to get supplies to Haiti now and with your help we can help save some lives.

I think we will be more effective by concentrating on collecting just a few needed items, so I am calling for just the following:

Pediolyte, Rehydralyte, Resol, Ricalyte (sports drinks do not have enough salt content)

Water purifying tablets (only chlorine based tablets are good for Cholera so please read the labels- Katadyne, Aquamuira, Aquatabs are all good)


Please bring your donations to the CAP office at 1704 5th Ave. N.

This epidemic has the potential to kill more people than the earthquake! It is spread through contaminated water and can kill a person in as little as one day!!  Access to good water (something we take so much for granted) is just not available to the masses in Haiti. 

The following story (from early on) gives a good sense of the situation.  Unfortunately, they have not been able to contain it and cases have been confirmed in Port Au Prince and beyond as well as in the North.

--------------------------

Haiti Cholera Hospital is a Horror Scene 22 Oct 2010 10:54:00 GMT
Written by: David Darg

Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.


We woke to disturbing news on Thursday. Our friends at Partners in Health told us droves of people were arriving at St Marc, sick with diarrhea, and that they were dying from dehydration at an alarming rate. The question was clear, could we mobilize to provide clean water to an area suspected of having Haiti's first major cholera outbreak in decades?

Our staff immediately began loading our trucks with equipment. As we drove the two hours to St Marc emails on my phone showed the death toll was climbing steadily. Everyone was nervous.

We arrived at St Marc hospital to a horror scene. I had to fight my way through the gate as a huge crowd of worried relatives stood outside, while others screamed for access as they carried dying relatives into the compound. The courtyard was lined with patients hooked up to intravenous (IV) drips. It had just rained and there were people lying on the ground on soggy sheets, half-soaked with feces.

Some children were screaming and writhing in agony, others were motionless with their eyes rolled back into their heads as doctors and nursing staff searched desperately for a vein to give them an IV. The hospital was overwhelmed, apparently caught out suddenly by one of the fastest killers there is.

Our friend, Cate Oswald, from Partners In Health came out from a triage tent clutching a hand-drawn map. It showed the local river and the names of a few communities where the patients had been coming from. Cate and some of her colleagues led us into the countryside to find the source of the epidemic.

Soon we were heading down narrow dirt roads with rice paddies and canals on either side. The crisis had started the day before. Doctors realized it was getting serious during the night. By then the villagers had heard of the deaths and word spread quickly not to drink water from the river.

Most people had gone thirsty for hours. The roads were lined with villagers holding buckets, begging for water. Some larger groups had set up road blocks and our convoy was forced to stop and explain that we didn't have water, only equipment to purify water, and that we were heading to the source of the problem. The villagers reluctantly let us pass.

People were constantly trying to flag us down and pointing to sick friends and relatives. One group forced us to stop - they had a girl close to death. PIH staff started her on an IV and placed her in their vehicle. Her mother, clutching another baby, explained that her husband had died yesterday and asked us to save her daughter.

RISING TOLL

We arrived at the place where many of the patients had originated from, a small dusty community called Babou La Port. Our team set up a water purification system, which filters and chlorinates, ensuring that any bacteria or diseases are killed.

As we worked, sick villagers of all ages congregated under the shade of some large trees. The medical staff placed IVs in some. One, a boy named Frantz, was brought to us by his grandmother. He was weak and vomiting. His grandmother was frail and could only point to the river when we asked her how long Frantz had been ill.

Diarrhea is unfortunately a common problem in this part of the world. A villager with cholera might lie down on feeling ill, expecting to get better, and be dead within hours.

Convoys of trucks plastered with the posters of various presidential candidates drove up and down the dirt roads. Many candidates saw this as an opportunity to campaign. They were tossing out small plastic bags of water to the desperate crowds. There were fights for the water and one man was crushed under a truck in the scuffle.

Our filtration unit fired up and word spread quickly. Soon a sea of multi-colored buckets surrounded us. There were no cheers and little laughter; most of the villagers were stunned, afraid and weak. They were just relieved to have water.

Some of our Haitian staff agreed to stay with the system overnight and keep it operating. It was a daunting challenge, to stay awake surrounded by deadly disease and desperate villagers.

Back at St Marc hospital not much had changed, other than the death toll. As I write, the confirmed toll is 135 and rising with thousands more infected. There are still patients being carried into the hospital close to death.

Now however the cries of the mothers are louder and there are even more people at the gates desperate to hear news of their loved ones. The hospital is struggling to cope with such a sudden influx of patients, especially since it is still trying to recover from the January earthquake.

The scenes at St Marc reminded me of Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince after the quake: patients lying in the streets, doctors struggling to cope, mass hysteria and fatigue.

On Thursday morning, as the scale of the problem began to emerge, my friend Dr Koji from Partners in Health shook my hand and said "Let's stop this". The only way to halt a disease like cholera is to stop people from getting infected. The hardest hit areas now have access to safe water, and thanks to people like Dr Koji the sick are receiving treatment.

Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.


Volunteering in Haiti

Please be aware that at this point general volunteers can tax the sanitation systems, food and water supplies, etc.   For those coordinating aid efforts, balancing needs with capabilities has to be a tremendously difficult and delicate task.   

Unless you are a certified medical personel/first responder, now is not the time to come.  Please let the professionals do their job first as they help the Haitians through the immediate dangers and relief efforts…

[Who should come?] Those who are healthy, who have specific skills such as carpentry, construction, plumbing, electrical work, to help with the first stages of rebuilding. Consider learning more Haitian Creole — 10 lessons are available for free at www.byki.com, and more lessons can be purchased.


Good article to read before volunteering: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34958965/ns/world_news-haiti_earthquake/


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