Archive for February, 2010

Haiti: New areas of work in areas of great need

Friday, February 26th, 2010

The Direction for Civil Protection (DCP) estimates that 222,517 people died in Haiti following the Jan. 12 earthquake, an increase of 5,000 people since the organization’s report a week ago.

Currently, the most pressing needs continue to be shelter and sanitation. There is still rubble to be removed and suitable land has to be found for the construction of transitional shelter.

The Dominican Republic Baptist Convention (CBD) is partnering with four Haitian Baptist churches in Port-au-Prince and extending assistance to 16 other Haitian Baptist churches with emergency aid to help in their respective communities. There will be six distributions (one distribution every two weeks) of food, hygiene products and tarpaulins.

Volunteers from the United States are needed to help in packaging and delivering the goods. They are also needed to work in selected churches with clean up. Pray that communities will be receptive to a touch of God’s love through this disaster response. Pray for distributions to be fair and safe to those that have not yet received assistance.

Southern Baptist volunteer teams heading to new sites in Haiti include a medical team from Nebraska, a student team from Georgia and a medical team with professionals from various states. Baptist Global Response has identified projects that meet short-term needs with a big-picture perspective. Pray for BGR and partners who are trying to implement these projects. Ask God to give them wisdom and guidance as they work in Haiti.

Medical work in Haiti: ‘incredible privilege’

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (BP)–A team of medical volunteers from Florida hasn’t stopped working since arriving in Haiti on Feb. 3. There is just too much to do.

Pam Fields (center), from First Baptist Church in Jacksonville, Fla., coaxes a smile from a pregnant Haitian woman at a field hospital across from the collapsed presidential palace.  (Photo by Ken Touchton/Florida Baptist Convention)

It has been nearly one month since the massive earthquake shook this impoverished nation. Some estimates have placed the death toll as high as 200,000. Following an initial assessment by Florida and Southern Baptist disaster relief representatives, Florida joined South Carolina, Kentucky and Mississippi in mobilizing emergency medical teams to help lead the Baptist response, following initial medical teams from Arkansas and North Carolina.

Each day, Haitians line up to be seen by the Florida medical personnel who are working out of a field hospital situated in the police barracks directly across from Haiti’s presidential palace — a once-proud looking structure whose grand domes now sit slumped in crumbled surrender.

Rick Picerno, an orthopedic surgeon and member of First Baptist Church in Jacksonville, helped organize and recruit the Florida medical team.

“This entire process, although we all feel very thrown together at the last minute, has obviously had God’s hand all over it,” Picerno said. “The needs here on the ground specifically for this week so accurately met the makeup of our team. There was a big need for a dentist, an OB/GYN and a pediatrics nurse. That’s exactly what we brought, without knowing the need.”

Picerno said the entire Florida team has been moved by the spirit of the Haitian people they have treated. “The people we have seen, even those in such desperate situations, have come across so thankful and grateful,” he said, adding that the doctors and nurses are praying for each person with whom they come in contact, even if it’s for the briefest moment.”

Florida team members have seen evidence of a society growing restless – gunshot wounds and stabbings have come through the clinic – but there have also been moments of joy. On Feb. 6, team members assisted with three births, one by emergency Caesarean section.

“Even now, it’s so hard to explain what we’ve seen and done in these first few days,” Picerno said. “It’s an incredible privilege to be able to help the Haitians as we have.”

The makeshift hospital across from the presidential palace was birthed by Omayra Alvarez, a native of the Dominican Republic who rushed to the scene after the earthquake and persuaded the authorities to allow her to begin treating wounded survivors of the quake.

When the Southern Baptist assessment team met her, Alvarez was extremely low on medical supplies and critical elements such as infant formula. The assessment team responded immediately with in-kind donations and an agreement that Southern Baptist medical teams would be on the way to help.

Brenda Outlaw, an emergency room trauma nurse at Baptist Hospital (South) in Jacksonville, Fla., has been working in the hospital’s makeshift triage center — the first point of entry for the several-hundred Haitians each day waiting to see a doctor.

The triage unit consists of eight lawn chairs lined side by side under a blue plastic tarp. The doctors and nurses conduct a quick interview and assessment and determine whether the patient’s needs call for them to see a doctor in another area of the facility — general medicine, dentistry, obstetrics, surgery, or pediatrics.

Most of the quake-related treatments involve changing bandages and treating infected sores and wounds. Some have needed fingers or toes amputated. The majority of treatment, Outlaw said, has involved quality of life issues.

“Just about every child we see complains of flu and stomach ache, but what they all have is worms,” Outlaw said. “So many are living in horrible conditions; you know they aren’t getting clean water and sanitation. And so many kids and adults are suffering from respiratory problems – obviously from inhalation of so much [airborne matter] after the quake.”

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Written by Russ Rankin, a freelance writer based in Franklin, Tenn.

Ark. volunteers see Haiti’s anguish

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

By Lisa Watson

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (BP) — Devastation and despair — that’s what an Arkansas Baptist medical team encountered when they touched down in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Jan. 18, just seven days after a 7.0 earthquake ravaged the struggling nation.

The 11-member team spent Jan. 18-22 in Haiti on a mission of healing and hope.

Port-au-Prince was “a city in shambles, with buildings down, people displaced, lots of injured people,” said Tamra Gore, who serves as a chaplain for the Benton, Ark., police department. “There were lots of people just living in fear, depressed, hungry, thirsty – not knowing what to do.”

“Haiti was at its best a poor nation. Now, hope has been ripped from the people,” said team member Carl Garvin of Omaha, Ark.

“It was almost like once they recover from one disaster there is another disaster. There is just a lack of hope.”

However, people are beginning to go about their normal lives, though still living with the terrible aftermath of the Jan. 12 quake, Garvin said.

“I noticed people walking by collapsed buildings where there was a smell of dead bodies,” he said. “But they seemed to shut it out of their minds like it did not exist. It was like if it was out of sight, it was out of mind. There was just a lot of mass confusion.”

The Arkansas Baptist team stayed at an orphanage just a few miles outside of Port-au-Prince. They went prepared to purify water and eat only the MREs (meals ready to eat) they took with them. But instead, orphanage workers prepared daily meals for the group. They found another “surprise,” a diesel generator that provided electricity at least part of every day.

The team, which included two medical doctors, four nurses, an emergency medical technician, a physical therapist, a crisis counselor and a nurse practitioner, treated a range of injuries, including a woman with a protruding bone from her chin.

“We also saw much fear,” Garvin said. “There were headaches, nausea and other forms of stomach distress. These are the physical signs and symptoms following great stress.”

Amid the pain and despair, the team also witnessed glimmers of hope.

Gore related instances of God’s “miraculous” provision involving, for example, two large bags they took to Haiti filled with food for children who visited the clinic. As those sacks emptied, Gore noticed a third bag of food. “We didn’t have three bags,” she insisted.

Team members even had opportunities to minister at the airport while they waited several hours for their return flight to the U.S. Gore said the airport was full of search and rescue teams from all over the world who spoke English or had translators. “They all needed to share their pictures and have someone hear their stories,” she said. “One man told me, ‘You are the first person to let me cry.’”

Garvin called the situation in Haiti a logistical nightmare. Supplies are pouring in with no structure to distribute them.

He suggested future teams bound for Haiti spend time together getting to know one another and praying together to develop “spiritual cohesiveness” as they prepare to go.

Gore agreed. “They need to be in prayer about what they will face and what they will do,” she said. “They must be spiritually prepared. They need to realize they are not going in as heroes, but to help people and love the Haitian people.”

Teams also need to be prepared to deal with the lack of security, to be in good health and have all the necessary shots for traveling to Haiti, Gore said.

“It also would help if someone in each group had knowledge of Haitian culture and history,” Garvin said. “There are dos and don’ts in each culture.”

Team members were aware of the risks involved in their trip, said Robby Tingle, missions ministries team leader for the Arkansas Baptist State Convention.

As the team prepared to depart for Haiti, Tingle told them, “I can’t guarantee you will get there. I can’t guarantee where you will be once you get there. I can’t guarantee what you are going to eat outside of what you are taking with you. Nor can I guarantee that I can get you back home.”

Tingle and two others, an advance logistics team for the state convention, have since traveled to Haiti to work toward ways of minimizing such risks for future teams.

Gore asked for prayer for Haitians to find peace. “They need to feel some peace…. They need to feel God is with them and that they can call out to Him in their time of need.”

Garvin said there isn’t a quick fix to the problems in Haiti. He said Baptist volunteers must be there for the long haul.

“After the crisis disappears from the news, we need to be aware that Haiti is still there and much needs to be done in the months and years ahead,” Garvin said. “Let’s don’t forget about the Haitians.”
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Lisa Watson is associate editor of the Arkansas Baptist News (www.arkansasbaptist.org), newsjournal of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention.