LSUHSC at Shreveport has a team of experts in wound management from our school of Allied Health in Haiti. This is a three member team led by Dean of Allied Health, Joe McCulloch. They are specialists in wound care management and are working 12 hour shifts seeing patients.
The University of South Alabama College of Medicines Center for Strategic Health Innovation and National Center for Disaster Medical Response has been deeply engaged in the Haitian relief efforts. Carl Taylor the Center’s Director, together with his coding team of James Muyiso and Joram Mwangi developed on their own time a collaboration hub for sharing requests for help and offers of assistance. That hub, found at http://h.xchlive.org provided a valuable tool during the early days of the event as logistics and communications were still being sorted out. In addition much of the Centers experience is in medical surge capacity management. The Center, with the permission and support of the Alabama Department of Public Health, built and delivered to the Health Cluster in Haiti, a Haitian version of its AIMS event management system. AIMS for Haiti found at http://h.aimslive.org originally acquired data from 142 health care centers in Haiti and incorporated it into the AIMS medical management format. Though not currently in use by the Health Cluster AIMS Haiti remains live and ready for use.
The vaccination team of the Georgia-4 Disaster Medical Assistance Team, a Federal Emergency Management Agency designated team sponsored by the Medical College of Georgia, was deployed to Atlanta to help immunize relief workers traveling to Haiti. Additionally, Dr. Richard Schwartz, chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine in the Medical College of Georgia School of Medicine, and Dr. James J. James, director of the American Medical Association's Center for Public Health Preparedness and Disaster Response, co-presented a free webinar for health care professionals headed to Haiti. Participants received an overview of the earthquake disaster and an idea of what they will encounter, including public health risks and injuries.
Weill Cornell Medical College has a 30 year history of collaboration with the GHESKIO clinic in Port-au-Prince Haiti, the first institution in the world dedicated to the fight against HIV/AIDS. GHESKIO is located in the heart of Port-au-Prince, in one of the areas worst hit by the earthquake, and was badly damaged.
The center, founded in 1980 by Dr. Jean William Pape, Director of GHESKIO and Professor of Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College, has provided free, continuous medical care to the people of Haiti since 1982. Prior to the disaster, the clinic served more than 100,000 patients.
In normal times, the GHESKIO clinic typically serves about 1,200 patients a day at its main location and 300 more at a satellite clinic near the U.S. Embassy. This week, the clinic saw more than 85% of its usual caseload while still caring for the thousands injured by the earthquake.
GHESKIO's role in earthquake relief has been documented by major media outlets, including NBC News and the Wall Street Journal. In addition, Weill Cornell is raising money to help support GHESKIO’s relief efforts. Media coverage, daily updates on our activities on the ground in Haiti, and a link to donate online can be found at WCMC’s Global Health Website (http://weill.cornell.edu/globalhealth)
At approximately 2:30 pm on Monday, January 25th “Penn Medicine Team One” – the first medical team from Penn Medicine to fly to Haiti to provide expert medical care – departed from the Philadelphia International Airport. The nine-member team was bid farewell by fellow colleagues shortly before boarding a bus for the airport and consisted of orthopaedic and trauma surgeons, anesthesiologists, critical medical and surgical care nurses, OR and peri-operative nurses, and OR technical specialists. The team expects to be in Haiti for approximately two weeks. Over 150 Penn Medicine faculty and staff have volunteered for the relief effort to date. Given the challenging situation in Haiti, the first team members were chosen because, in addition to their medical expertise, they had previous military, Foreign Service, or missionary work experience.
The Penn Medicine Team One team is going to a 200-bed hospital an hour outside of Port-au-Prince in Cange. In addition, faculty and staff across Penn Medicine worked hard throughout the weekend to identify and obtain critical equipment for this mission. Due to their dedication and diligence, 1,200 lbs of medical supplies were sent with the medical team. (Read more on Penn Medicine's effort)USC/L.A. Team Reports From Haiti. A team of 10 Keck School trauma specialists, including trauma and orthopedic surgeons, anesthetists, emergency medicine and intensive care unit specialists, nurses and physician assistants traveled from Los Angeles to Miami on Jan. 16.
The next morning, the team flew from Fort Lauderdale to Port-au-Prince on a private jet provided in partnership with Project Medishare Haiti and the Miami Global Institute. Upon arrival in Port-au-Prince, the team consulted with University of Miami colleagues who are currently staffing a field hospital within the United Nations compound at the Port-au-Prince airport.
Asif Hamid, oral surgeon based at the Charing Cross Campus of Imperial College AHSC, is being deployed as a member of a 10 man medical disaster response team from Humanity First, United Kingdom to Port-au-Prince, Haiti. They will be joined by a 12 member team from the USA and Canada in a collaborative effort with the UN to provide as much medical help as possible. Amongst the services they will be able to offer will include acute medicine, trauma with mobile theatre facilities and maxillofacial trauma. It is anticipated that they will be able to see several thousand patients during their stay there. Among the challenges they will face include a destroyed infrastructure, logistics, lack of clean water, shortage of fuel and a hostile environment. They leave on Friday the 22nd of January taking over 1.5 tonnes of medicines and equipment with them.
Dr. Jean E. Robillard, Vice President for Medical Affairs for University of Iowa Health Care indicates that a tremendous out-pouring of support and desire to be of assistance has occurred in the wake of this disaster. He stated that “We want to assure that this support gets to the places where it can best be utilized quickly.” He said that the entire University community is working together to develop a centralized approach that will direct faculty, staff and students to make contributions to well-established international relief organizations, such as the Red Cross and Doctors without Borders, that have already mobilized to aid the Haitian people. In addition, clinicians with prior experience in Haiti have volunteered their assistance and are being encouraged to contact one of the recognized relief organizations to arrange for transportation and other logistical needs.