Haiti Mission Project

Loma Linda University School of Medicine Class of 2010
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  • Update from Daniel Patton

    Posted on February 18th, 2010 dpatton No comments

    I’m tired. Wrist fracture. 2 ex fix removals for infected pins. Girl with anterior dislocated hip for 5 weeks (wow!) was scheduled for surgical reduction but her surgical incision from previous ruptured doudenal ulcer was full of pus. General surgery washed her abdomen. I hope she survives.

    I worked in the ER for much of the afternoon. I diagnosed and managed UTI, Malaria, Uterine bleeding after D&C. It has been a while since I thought about gynecological problems.

    A 67 yo lady with A pelvic fracture from the quake came in and I worked her up. I had a great discussion with Haiti radiology technician about the merits of cross table lateral versus judet xrays.

    A good translator makes all the difference. I am trying to learn some creol.

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  • Update from David Puder

    Posted on February 18th, 2010 David Puder No comments

    Day 3 in Haiti: a long day.  ER had a never ending line of both the very sick and also the emotionally sick. Pray for a girl who came in tonight with sepsis from a scabes skin infection gone bad. Pray for rest For our team. Alfonso just said “I have seen more and done more in these three days then in my whole 4th year”.

    Scabes? Then infected with staph... Now in respiratory failure

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  • A million words…

    Posted on February 17th, 2010 Andrew Haglund No comments
    So if a picture is worth a 1000 words what's a video worth?  The video at the link below was shot during my brief visit home and gives you some further insight into our efforts here.

    http://www.llu.edu/public-health/haiti.page

    Thanks to Cosmin and Michael for the post yesterday.  I may need to rely on them even more as it seems things are as busy as ever for me.  Besides they take better pictures and do this kind of thing for a living.

    Thanks to you all for your continued prayers and support.
  • Update from Daniel Patton

    Posted on February 17th, 2010 dpatton No comments

    Day 2

    Puder the Tall

    Slept like a log. ‘Puder the tall’ wanted to sleep in a tent on the roof but we were informed the roof floods periodically. So my sleep was in the hospital: top floor- on the floor.

    Cold shower. 7:30 staff meeting. Granola bar on the way to the OR.

    First case: 28 y/o lady with smashed leg from quake. She had pins with an external fixator on her femur and cast on her broken ankle. She was grinning all the way. 4.5 weeks after the injury we fought the scar already forming. SIGN nail(360×8), ORIF fib w 10 hole plate and syndesmotic screw. I was first assist to dr cummings (LLU grad) and scrub tech. Then carried pt to xray on stretcher. Then carried her to post op care.

    During the case, Puder the tall filled the OR door displaying a syringe full of pus to request an Ortho washout for a 12 y/o boy. He was our next case.

    Followed by an infected wrist that had been fixed a week bofore. Seeing the sanitation makes me wonder how any of our cases will avoid infection after they leave our care. We write the instructions for follow up and wound care right on their casts.

    Walking down the steet after the last case w dr cummings we were impressed by the joyful energy of the kids. Kids darting between the tent city that reently became their home. The sight of a camera brought dozens of kids. Neighbors thrown together by disaster.

    Kids grow up but they don’t loose their spirit: checking on the morning case: rod down her femur. 8 screws through her ankle. And tough as nails! She had not asked for the pain meds we had perscribed for her all day!! This would not happen in the US.

    I’m off to help in the ER.

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  • New Autoclave

    Posted on February 16th, 2010 Michael No comments
    A quick introduction: I’m Michael Wolcott, myself and Cosmin Cosma from the office of University Relations at LLU are in Haiti for a couple of weeks. From time to time we’ll try and help Andrew out a little by updating this blog.

    A new autoclave came to the hospital today. The US Navy and US Army brought it and unloaded it. It was quite a feat and great to see my tax dollars at work. The autoclave will allow the hospital to safely sterilize more equipment.

    There’s also word about the shelving that will allow all of the supplies to be organized. It sounds like it might be arriving tomorrow.

    We’ve been here for two days and are amazed by the work of the volunteers, a stream of people pour into the hospital and they’re able to see patient after patient day and night.








  • Updates from Alfonso Duran, Daniel Patton, and David Puder

    Posted on February 16th, 2010 Blake Cameron 1 comment

    From Alfonso Duran:

    First day in Haiti…. It’s hard to put in words how the situation is down here (tragic, unfair, sadness, inhumane, terrible, fear and etc). However the people seem so resilient; they have already begun to rebuild their homes, clean up the streets, care for their sick and assist others in need. The Haitians are truly amazing people. I am blessed because I was given the opportunity to work with them as they rebuild their future.

    From Daniel Patton:

    So first day…
    Driving though the city was incredible. Buildings with the family of the dead still crawling over the rubble. Our van overheated we turned off the AC and we overheated.
    20 min after arriving at the hospital, I was scrubbed on a foot abcess drain. That was followed by putting a rod down a 95 y/o ladies femur. But first I helped assemble a ventilator for anaesthesia.
    The rod was placed without the use of portable xray as is standard in the US. The results are graet. The attendings generously allowed me to perform much of the surgery.
    I went to find the other med students in the ER. There was a baby delivered but not breathing, blue. I bagged while the nurse stimulated the infant to cry: blue to pink. “Alfonzo the short” was sowing up a childs head: lots of screaming. “Puder the tall” consulted Ortho (me) for some rib fractures, just to make me feel good.
    Then I followed up with my post op patients and xrays. Doing great. Removed a cast and changed fdressing or an ankle fracture case tomorrow. Took sutures out of a boy with likely bone cancer.
    It’s 8pm and I just ate my first meal other than cliff bars. Gonna set up my mosquito net and sleep a few hours.

    From David Puder:

    First day at the hospital in Port-au-Prince, worked all day in the ER! Amazing! Diagnosed malaria, Glyburide induced hypoglycemia with pneumonia (some other hospital also thought he had GERD, but really only pleuritis per history….)  Picture Alfonso Duran yelling, “Check his glucose stat!” Daniel Patton screwed in someone’s femur nail and other fun ortho things. The place has 20 monks preparing a vegan meal for everyone! It is the only hospital still completely free of charge, and it seems we have just enough people to be endlessly busy, but also doing a good job!

    The one thing I am blown away with is the Haitians were cleaning up the earthquake rubble, translating for me for free all day, basically going back to work! Some of them would pull out money to pay even, but since everything is donated, it is free! I felt safe going through the streets today, even when our car overheated and we had to get out… The Haitians basically fixed our car before we knew why 10 guys were frantically moving around!

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  • Happy Valentines Day from Haiti

    Posted on February 14th, 2010 Andrew Haglund No comments
    We have had a couple of slower days at the Hopital due to the national day (or 3 days) of mourning which was Friday Feb. 12th, one month after the initial earthquake.  While patient load has been less there has been plenty of work to be done.  We have received so many supplies in the last 3 days that we have filled our 4 supply rooms to capacity, and have started filling up the ramp again.  We are still waiting for our shelves but are hopeful some will arrive this coming week.

    LLU Team 2 arrived on Friday night and includes:
    • Brock Cummings, MD Ortho Surgeon
    • Everly Lafontant, MD Family Medicine
    • Christa Chandy, MD Internal Medicine
    • Brook Beck, RN
    • Donna Pidder, RN
    • Marc Julissme, RN
    • Tim Hickman, Supplies & Facilities
    While we are excited about each and every one of our volunteers, we are particularly excited about Brook, Christa, and Tim, who have committed to stay here with us for multiple months.  Longer volunteer commitments really help us create continuity of service, something we desperately need around here.

    Things to look forward to this coming week:
    • A higher bandwidth Internet connection - Thank you ACTS & High Alert
    • A second Autoclave - Thank you Hopeforce
    • 3 more LLU Medical Students from the class of 2010
    • The LLU/AHI Media Team
    • The Maranatha Team of 6 along with their 6 structures to build on the property
    • And all the other volunteers that will be heading our way
    and now how bout some pics:

     
    CURE Intl. Team 1 heads home

     
    CURE Intl. Team 2 plays with the kids on their first day

     
    A German helicopter lands in front of the ADRA warehouse to take aid supplies to remote camps
      
     
    We have various accommodations here for our volunteer staff

     
    More volunteer housing

     
    The General Store - supplies left behind for others

     
    The supply ramp full again.  It was empty when I returned less than a week ago and now continues on like this another 30 or so feet around the corner.

     
    The supplies are in the ramp because we have 4 supply rooms that look like this.

    Please pray for the people of Haiti, our volunteers here, and that we get some shelving this week.
    Thanks for reading.
  • Allen in Haiti

    Posted on February 13th, 2010 David Puder No comments

    Hey everyone,

    It has been such a blessing to be able to help the Haitian people in their time of need. On Wednesday and Thursday I went out with a mobile clinic. Each day I saw over sixty patients! They range from newborns to the elderly, very sick to doing pretty well. Most patients are coming in with a variety of infections, many of which are likely to the poor living conditions. Over one million Haitians are now homeless. Many don’t even have tents to sleep in yet. It has been very sad to see some patients complaining of hunger pain because they are unable to afford food. There is no pill we can prescribe to fix this. The locals are extremely grateful for the help that we are providing. The Haitian children are beautiful and are very eager to smile if you wave or show them even the smallest smile. There is so much work to be done here both now and for years to come. I can’t urge you all, my classmates, enough to continue helping.

    Thank you for your continued prayers,

    Allen Patee

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  • Numbers & Toys

    Posted on February 12th, 2010 Andrew Haglund No comments
    Well it's been a whirlwind couple of days here.  Every night I say to myself tonight you're going to do a blog posting.  Unfortunately that conversation usually occurs around 10:30 or 11PM.  After a 16-17 hour work day, the pillow tends to overrule the keyboard.  So tonight's posting is happening at 9:30PM but is still going to be brief.

    Some of you reading the blog have already been here as volunteers and have asked for updates about what we are doing and what our current census is.  Well here you go:

    Report for yesterday Thursday 2/11/2010
    431 New patient visits
    57 Admissions
    ~250 Patients on site
    ~1000 Total number of people living on the hospital grounds
    14 Surgical procedures performed in the indoor O.R.s (STS Graft, 4 ORIF humerus reductions, Hernia repair, Thyroidectomy, Laporotomy, anoplasty, Foot Flap, I&D Subscapular abscess, ORIF Tibia, Leg STSG, Femur ORIF)
    8 -10 out-patient surgical procedures performed with IV sedation

    And now for those of you who don't have a clue as to what those procedures are...  
    One of the fun parts of this job is the opportunity to hand deliver gifts from kids in the states to our patients.   Here are a few of our kids here as the receive hand made cards from the LLUC Childrens division and a few toys from my boys.

     

      

      

      

     


    Thank you all for your prayers and your support. 
  • Back at the Hopital

    Posted on February 9th, 2010 Andrew Haglund No comments
    I am back in Haiti at Hopital Adventiste d'Haiti.  There have been many changes here while I was gone.  Indeed as I had heard there is now water in the hospital's pipes 24/7.  Actually we have too much water right now and the cistern is overflowing, but that should be solved in the morning with the installation of a flow control valve.  We also have moved 25 patients back inside the building and our outdoor census is just a little over 200 patients.  While we only have 225 patients our daily population on the hospital compound soars to over 1000 with patient family members and our volunteer staff.   There is much more to tell but it is getting late and I am tired.  Here are a few pics...

     
    Dr. Nelson with a patient in a private room

     
    Surgical transport picking up a patient from our indoor Pre-Op room

     
    More indoor treatment rooms

     
    Even an indoor Post-Op room now

     
    We really need some shelving!