Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Trip Conclusion
Monday, February 8, 2010
Saturday, February 6, 2010
The journey back to Pittsburgh....
Friday, February 5, 2010
Thursday and Friday
After 13 hrs. of travel the team has arrived at their over night destination in the Dominican Republic. Many people helped with the logistics of today's unusal route (unusual because of the earthquake) out of LaCroix. We are thankful for all the roles these people played and that even though the day was long it went smoothly. The team is scheduled to arrive back in Pittsburgh late tomorrow night.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Wednesday
This was another exciting and productive day that began @ 6 am. Our first team of 2 docs, 2 nurses, 3 assistants (I was one) and a dentist went to the village of La Coupe. This is a village very high in the mountains. The villagers were incredibly patient. The team saw 300-400 patients. As always there are children who make you laugh and smile and those that break your heart. There was one hypertonic two year old girl that was particularly sad. She only weighed ten pounds, in the U.S. her situation would have been fixed immediately but here, at this late stage, there is nothing we could do. She will probably pass by the end of the month. This made everyone cry while at La Coupe. Good news is that with the antibiotics and other wonderful medications given to us by the group that flew us down, many people were able to rest easier.
Our second team of four went to Perisse. They saw patients in the church and were quite surprised at the number of sick children they saw with pneumonia and other serious illnesses. Over 200 sick kids were treated. This team got the opportunity to go to the hospital in St. Marc to deliver meds and other supplies. There were some amazing volunteers there from the Canada and the U.S. We made plans tonight to take three very critical patients from the villages to this hospital. These patients both have serious infections in the face and neck.
We are so thankful for the travel mercies granted us today as our team moved in opposite directions, saving lives, one at a time.
Tomorrow we are going to a Haitian wedding!
*the post was written by Andrea, a nurse on the mission team
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Tuesday
- the team is all working well together and everyone is healthy (this mama was worried about traveler's revenge!) While we talked I could hear people chatting and chuckling in the background...and Ian affirms that spirits have remained high for the mission on hand.
- there is no need to set an alarm to rise and shine when the roosters wake you instead.
- it had rained overnight so it was very humid and the temps were to break 100 degrees.
- Ian had eaten the best banana EVER for breakfast!...do you think they taste differently picked right from the tree than they do from our grocery stores?
- and he's so glad for this experience as he realizes there is subsequently much work to be done.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Monday
The rest of the trip to Paul was out of this world. The children have nothing; no clothes and very little food. When we got to Paul there were already upwards of a hundred people waiting for us. We set up in the school house, and started seeing people.
We saw some very encouraging things and some very disheartening things. We saw several people whose family had died in Port au Prince and had come to live with relatives in Paul. One of these was a four year old boy who had had sutures put in his hand after the quake, the skin had grown over them and they were very difficult to remove. This was excruciatingly hard to watch. We saw several people that needed more help than we could give. We are attempting to arrange, through Pittsburgh doctor, Dan Latanzi (who was here last week), for these people to be taken to the U.S.N.S. Comfort. These include a patient with testicular cancer, one with a brain tumor and a child who had a seizure.
Other good news--at lunch we fed more than 300 people. This was spectacular. The hardest part of the day was trying to help a 13 year old girl in the final stages of hiv/aids. She was 5'6" and 82 lbs. She would not eat. She will probably pass by Thursday. There is nothing we could do.I am weeping as I write this. We have all cried today. In more cases than not these people can do nothing to prevent what is physically wrong with them. Despite the great sadness the day was very successful, we saw more than 350 people!
I could go on about the condition of Haiti, but I need to leave you with this; in this country that I have come to love, there is pure happiness. The people, despite having nothing, are for the most part happy. This is not like America. It might be cliche, but you truly cannot buy happiness. I say that only because I now realize that I see it everyday in Pittsburgh. There is no happiness in things. There is only true happiness in the Lord.
Please pray for the people.
Monday, February 1, 2010
A glimpse at our Sunday
Today (Sunday) has been incredibly hard and joyful, I believe I can say this for all of us. Worship was amazing. Although I did not understand a word, I truly trust that today I experienced love and music having no language barrier. Just picture a worship service with island funk music infused with two trumpets, a saxophone and a trombone. The amount of passion that these people put into worship is like nothing I have ever seen before. They truly depend on God for all of their needs. We then had a brief lunch that included my first taste of a freshly cracked coconut and toured the compound where the clinic is.