Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

    Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses

    24 November 2010 ? The top United Nations humanitarian official has stressed the need for a much stronger international and national response to the cholera epidemic in Haiti during a visit to the Caribbean nation.

    The UN World Health Organization (WHO) and its regional arm, the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), now estimate that based on the speed with which people are being infected, the outbreak that began in late October could affect 400,000 people.

    This is considered a worst-case scenario, which is avoidable if the prevention and treatment responses reach people in the poor areas in the capital, Port-au-Prince, and other towns and outlying areas in the country.

    ?This projection is a wake-up call,? Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amos said yesterday in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

    ?We need to invest in cholera prevention nationwide in Haiti, as well as building more treatment centres and increasing the number of health workers on the ground to support the work already being done,? she added.

    Ms. Amos saw first-hand some of the humanitarian work already being done in Haiti, which she noted has already saved tens of thousands of lives. ?But it is not enough to curb the loss of life, or equip Haitians to tackle this crisis themselves,? she said.

    ?This epidemic has not yet peaked. If we don?t respond strongly and quickly enough then more people will die needlessly.?

    The death toll, as of Monday, stood at 1,200, but the experts have said that the disease ? which is spread through contaminated food and water ? might have claimed as many as 2,000 people, with some fatalities in remote areas going unreported. The number of reported cases is currently approaching 50,000.

    The UN and its partners have appealed for $164 million for additional treatment centres, scaled-up public information campaigns to help people understand how to prevent infection, supplies of medical equipment, rehydration salts, water purification tablets and other essential materials to respond to the outbreak.

    As she wrapped up her visit today, Ms. Amos met with President Rene Pr?val, and visited a displaced people?s camp in the Tabarre neighbourhood of Port-au-Prince and a cholera treatment centre. She also met senior leaders from the UN and humanitarian agencies in Haiti, and the non-governmental organization Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.as...5&Cr=haiti&Cr1=

  • #2
    Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

    Cholera-hit Haiti needs nurses and doctors - U.N.

    Thu Nov 25, 2010 12:20am GMT

    By Pascal Fletcher

    PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - Haiti needs a surge of foreign nurses and doctors to stem deaths from a raging cholera epidemic that an international aid operation is struggling to control, the United Nations' top humanitarian official said.

    About 1,000 trained nurses and at least 100 more doctors were urgently needed to control the epidemic, which has struck the impoverished Caribbean nation months after a destructive earthquake.

    The outbreak has killed more than 1,400 Haitians in five weeks and the death toll is climbing by dozens each day.

    "We clearly need to do more," Valerie Amos, the U.N.'s Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, told Reuters in Port-au-Prince during a visit seeking to increase the scale and urgency of the cholera response.

    "But it's not just money, it's crucially people, in terms of getting more doctors, nurses, more people who can help with the awareness-raising and getting information out there," she said in an interview late on Tuesday at the U.N. logistics base in Port-au-Prince.
    ...
    Amos said the United Nations would reach out to countries and aid organizations with the potential to rapidly supply medical staff, for example Cuba, which already has about 400 doctors and other health personnel in Haiti.

    [...]

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

      Haiti - Cholera Epidemic : An apocalypse scenario
      24/11/2010 12:16:29

      <TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

      Excerpt:
      ...
      Third scenario:
      With 60.240 cases infected and treated whose 25.248 which have
      required a hospitalization and 1.415 victims in 39 days in Haiti (assessment of November 20th, 2010), Health experts now propose a third scenario, because the spread of the epidemic in Haiti is not comparable to any previous epidemics in the world. In this third apocalypse scenario, Dr. Jon Andrus, assistant director of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) now estimates that it could be up to 400,000 cases of cholera in Haiti in the next 12 months, including 200,000 in the next 3 months. "We work with key partners to refine these preliminary estimates in order to improve and maintain a sustainable response to the epidemic."

      Adding "Given the extremely poor sanitary conditions (58% of the population lacks access to safe drinking water) that existed long time before the quake, and worsened after the hurricane and with the cholera epidemic, we expect to see the number of cases continue to increase ", adding that "the epidemic has not yet reached its peak. We do not know when it might occur".

      Mr. Nigel Fisher, the coordinator of UN humanitarian action in Haiti, citing figures in circulation, said the reality was rather be close to 2000 dead and 60 to 70 000 cases, due to difficulties faced in obtaining accurate statistics on the impact of the epidemic in remote and isolated areas of the country. He stressed how important it is to conduct an accelerated implementation of programs of access to water and sanitation. "Beyond financial resources, we need more doctors and more nurses," he said, recalling that the epidemic continues to spread over the months or even years to come .
      ...

      The UN has launched ten days ago a call for 164 million dollars (121 million euros), but only 6.8 million (4.14%) have been funded so far. "The funding is too low. This is a situation of extreme urgency, a matter of hours. The epidemic does not wait and continues to evolve," said the spokesman for the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), Elisabeth Byrs. She also added that it was urgent to replenish stocks of equipment and drugs and replace staff that is exhausted recalling that it is necessary to have an average of "130 people to take care a cholera treatment center with 100 beds.


      Full text:
      http://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-17...-scenario.html

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

        Ochsner doctor ventures back to Haiti to provide medical care amid cholera epidemic

        Published: Tuesday, November 23, 2010, 4:30 PM



        'This is really upsetting,' Dr. Yvens Laborde reports from Haiti, where he is working in Cap Haitien. 'The patients are literally on the floor one on top of the other. '

        Excerpt:

        The degree of human suffering that is currently taking place in this small island nation is an affront to the most hardened of sensibilities. Eleven months later with all this international mobilization of goodwill, I see very little evidence of any significant improvement in the daily misery which the vast majority of Haitians are forced to call living.

        I have been working in Cap Haitien, the country?s second largest city, and its surrounding areas where the cholera epidemic is taking its toll and where our intervention with life-saving care and medications are making a difference. Yet I have witnessed two deaths today simply due to a lack of rapid access due to a shortage of IV fluids.


        Full text:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

          27 November 2010 Last updated at 08:43 ET

          UK pledges aid to fight Haiti cholera epidemic


          Britain is to fund more than 1,000 medical staff to set up treatment centres for victims of Haiti's worsening cholera epidemic.

          Ministers confirmed the UK would pay for 115 doctors, 920 nurses and 740 support staff from the region, as well as emergency supplies.

          The announcement comes after the UN warned 400,000 people could be infected by the disease in the next six months.

          [...]
          Britain pledges to fund more than 1,000 medical staff to set up treatment centres for victims of Haiti's worsening cholera epidemic.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

            Recruiting doctors for Haiti cholera crisis not easy
            <STYLE>.topPhoto, .photo {width:440px;}</STYLE><!-- -->

            A child with cholera symptoms is treated by volunteer American doctors at a hospital in Archaie, Haiti, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (AP / Ramon Espinosa)


            Updated: Sat Nov. 27 2010 7:39:10 PM
            Angela Mulholland, CTV.ca News Staff

            Haiti is in desperate need of more doctors and nurses to help it manage a cholera crisis that refuses to loosen its grip. But finding the medical staff who can answer that call for help is no simple task.

            Already, close to 60,000 Haitians have been treated for cholera and as many as 200,000 more could descend on the country's makeshift medical clinics in the next three months. Few expect the crisis to abate quickly, given the gaps in the country's sanitation and basic infrastructure that allowed the infectious disease to spread as quickly as it has.

            But while finding young, eager volunteers to dig drainage ditches and build clinics is, if not altogether easy, at least straightforward, the medical workers needed to help in health emergencies such as this one are unique.

            Marilyn McHarg, general director and co-founder of the Canadian section of M?decins Sans Fronti?res (MSF) / Doctors Without Borders says the medical staff needed for this crisis need to have flexiblity in their work schedules and flexibility in their personal lives.

            They also have to be ready to transition quickly into the demands of the work, because the training and orientation in health emergencies like the one in Haiti are "really short and mostly on the job."

            "When they get there, they have to function on a pretty intense level, so the more experience they have the better," McHarg said in an interview.
            MSF, which now has an impressive 27 cholera treatment centres in Haiti, is recruiting all kinds of personnel: doctors, anesthetists, nurses -- anyone who can devote a few weeks or preferably, a few months to help.


            [...]
            Get the latest stories shaping the city of Montreal, Quebec, directly from our expert journalists on the ground.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

              Local Doctor Pleads For Help With Haiti Outbreak

              Cholera May Claim 250,000 Lives, He Says

              POSTED: 4:38 pm CST November 30, 2010
              UPDATED: 5:09 pm CST November 30, 2010

              NEW ORLEANS -- Dr. Charles Rene said it nearly broke his heart as he left his homeland of Haiti this weekend, after spending nearly a month there battling the outbreak of cholera.

              Without action, he said, cholera will claim a quarter of a million lives.
              "(That's) about what we lost with the earthquake. We need to move. We need to act," said Rene, an ob-gyn at Tulane Hospital.
              ...

              "Death is death. I mean, people die for want of water and salt. It's painful to see.
              ...
              So now Rene is pushing for doctors and medicine, not just for his compound, but country wide.

              Full text:

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

                Haiti cholera 'tsunami' feared: St. John's MD

                Last Updated: Wednesday, December 1, 2010 | 1:08 PM NT


                A St. John's doctor who has been travelling to Haiti to provide care said the country's already burdened health-care system is preparing for the cholera epidemic to grow.

                "What we are hearing now is that this is the wave before the tsunami hits.

                Then we can expect that this is going to go on for several months and our need for more staff is going to expand in the very near future," Dr. Tiffany Keenan told CBC News Tuesday on the phone from Haiti.

                Keenan founded Haiti Village Health in a northern part of the country about three years ago in a rural seaside town west of one of the country's largest cities, Cap-Hati?n.

                She said the clinic has been operating 24 hours a day since Nov. 22 because nearby hospitals are unable to handle all the cholera patients in the area.

                "The local hospitals are overrun with cholera patients and under-staffed," she said.


                Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/newfoundlan...#ixzz170TpBIEJ

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors

                  Originally posted by Pathfinder View Post
                  Mr. Nigel Fisher, the coordinator of UN humanitarian action in Haiti, citing figures in circulation, said the reality was rather be close to 2000 dead and 60 to 70 000 cases, due to difficulties faced in obtaining accurate statistics on the impact of the epidemic in remote and isolated areas of the country. He stressed how important it is to conduct an accelerated implementation of programs of access to water and sanitation. "Beyond financial resources, we need more doctors and more nurses," he said, recalling that the epidemic continues to spread over the months or even years to come .
                  The United Nations estimated a week ago (post #3) that the actual number of fatalities was probably 2000. The Haitian Ministry of Health reported 1817 deaths today which is probably a conservative count based on the UN estimates.

                  Please see:


                  Ha&#239;ti-Cholera : 90.000 cas de contamination, dont 1817 morts

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                    Haiti: Ban appeals for immediate massive aid to fight deadly cholera epidemic

                    Children in Port-au-Prince participate in cholera prevention activities


                    3 December 2010 ? Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today called on the international community to provide immediate massive aid to Haiti to fight a deadly cholera epidemic raging through the impoverished country, warning that hundreds of thousands of lives are at risk.


                    ?Clearly, it will continue to spread, unfortunately,? he told an informal meeting of the General Assembly, noting that the epidemic could affect as many as 650,000 people in the next six months, and that the current toll may already be twice as high as the over 1,800 deaths and nearly 81,000 cases reported so far.

                    A United Nations appeal launched three weeks ago for $164 million is only 20 per cent funded as the Haitian Government, UN agencies and the humanitarian community seek to provide treatment and put preventive measures in place, supplying water-purification materials, carrying out large-scale public information campaigns, and helping to build treatment centres.

                    ?One thing is clear,? Mr. Ban said. ?Admirable as they may be, these collective efforts are simply not sufficient. Without a massive and immediate international response, we will be overwhelmed. The lives of hundreds of thousands of people are at risk. And it is up to us to act, with maximum speed and full resources.?

                    It was an appeal repeated by Assembly President Joseph Deiss, who told the 192-member body that efforts to prevent the spread of the epidemic cannot wait. ?In the current circumstances, the international community must do everything within its power to help the Haitian authorities and people,? he said. ?Urgent action must be taken to meet the humanitarian challenges and ease the suffering of the Haitian population.?

                    Mr. Ban cited the urgent need for more cholera treatment centres, both large and small, and more trained medical and non-medical personnel to run them to minimize the fatality rate, which he noted had decreased over the past six weeks from 7.6 per cent to 3.6 per cent in a country that is still reeling from an earthquake in January that killed 200,000 people and rendered some 1.3 million others homeless.

                    The UN World Health Organization (WHO) and its regional arm, the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), estimate that an additional 350 doctors, 2,000 nurses and 2,200 support staff will be required over the next three months, in addition to the 300 medical personnel that Cuba has already committed.

                    Some 30,000 community health workers and volunteers also need to be trained to help staff an estimated 15,000 oral re-hydration points, while still others are required to promote better hygiene in camps and communities. Cholera is spread through contaminated food and water ? due to poor access to safe water, inadequate sanitation and high population density in the camps.

                    [...]
                    http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.as...0&Cr=haiti&Cr1=

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                      Cuban medics a big force on Haiti cholera frontline<SCRIPT language=javascript src="http://static.reuters.com/resources/media/global/assets/multivariate/widget-videohack.js"></SCRIPT>

                      By Pascal Fletcher
                      PORT-AU-PRINCE | Fri Dec 3, 2010 5:33pm GMT

                      PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) - They don't send out press releases, don't have public information officers and their contacts are not widely publicized by the huge international humanitarian operation helping cholera-hit Haiti.

                      But when the United Nations appeals for more doctors and nurses to combat the deadly disease that is killing dozens by the day, it is to Cuba's medical brigade that U.N. officials are likely to turn to first.

                      With a tradition of service in the world's poorest and most forgotten states, the Cubans are a major frontline force in the multinational response to the raging epidemic, which has killed at least 2,000 people and probably more, since mid-October in the impoverished country.
                      ...

                      "The Cuban doctors are working in the most difficult places. It's our policy to concentrate on areas outside the national capital," he said, a fact acknowledged by both Haitian and foreign health authorities.

                      Full text:

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                        Thanks for everything Pathfinder!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                          You are welcome Sharon!


                          Haiti Emergency
                          Answering an urgent call from Borgne, Haiti

                          3 December 2010

                          http://<EMBED height=385 type=application/x-shockwave-flash width=640 src=http://www.youtube.com/v/fxHKxlOY__8?fs=1&hl=en_US allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></EMBED>

                          This video documents the efforts of MMRC Global to take supplies and medicines to one of the regions most affected by the cholera outbreak in Haiti. MMRC Global provides logistical support to medical teams on the ground, working in partnership with numerous international organizations.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                            Haiti - Cholera Epidemic : Canada boosts its emergency aid
                            04/12/2010 09:26:11

                            <TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD></TD><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>In response to the epidemic of cholera that now spans across Haiti, the Honourable Beverley J. Oda, Minister of International Cooperation, today announced further support of $2 million for the prevention and treatment of cholera in Haiti. This brings Canada's total response to the epidemic since late October to $7 million.

                            "Our thoughts continue to go out to the people of Haiti as they battle the cholera epidemic," said Minister Oda. "The Government of Canada's response aims to ensure that those struggling to fight this disease have the necessary supplies and personnel for treatment and prevention efforts. We will continue to monitor the situation on the ground."


                            Full text:

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Haiti cholera outbreak needs stronger response, top UN relief official stresses - In great need of nurses and doctors - UN appeals to international community for immediate massive aid to fight deadly epidemic

                              Haiti: Ban appeals for more funds to fight cholera, sets up panel to probe its origins


                              MINUSTAH peacekeepers carry containers of water into the town of Grande Saline, Haiti

                              17 December 2010 ? Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today appealed to the world for more funds to fight the cholera epidemic in Haiti that has already killed more than 2,400 people and infected nearly 110,000 others, 55,000 of whom had to be hospitalized.
                              ...

                              ?We need more funding,? Mr. Ban told a news conference in New York, noting that a $164 million appeal is only 21 per cent funded. ?Haiti needs more doctors, nurses, medical supplies, and it needs them urgently? Our first priority continues to be saving lives.?

                              He said it was crucial to get the message ?out, far and wide? that the disease can be managed through early treatment and some clear and simple steps, including washing hands with soap. Cholera is spread by contaminated food and water.
                              ...

                              Earlier this week UN Children?s Fund (UNICEF) Executive Director Anthony Lake visited a cholera treatment centre in an impoverished area of Port-au-Prince, the capital, where he pledged continued UN support and stressed that the most important partners in defeating cholera are Haitians themselves, who need to understand that the disease is preventable and treatable through proper hygienic measures.


                              More...
                              http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.as...6&Cr=haiti&Cr1=

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X