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MSF continues to scale up activities in Haiti amidst enormous levels of injuries

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The surgical units that MSF set up in Port au Prince, Haiti, continue to work around the clock to treat the vast numbers of patients with injuries from the earthquake. Priortising the most serious cases, the teams have been performing caesarian sections and amputations. Experienced MSF medical staff say they have never seen so many serious injuries.

In Chocsal hospital, where MSF relocated after its original facilities were so badly damaged, the operating theatre has been working non stop since early on Friday. In Trinite, where the team is treating people under canvas in the grounds of the medical facility that was hit by the earthquake, surgery has been taking place in an improvised theatre. Then in Carrefour, a district that was very badly affected, MSF has just started working in a hospital with two operating theatres.

Hans van Dillen, one of MSF’s Operational Coordinators in Port au Prince, says there was an immediate reaction.

“When people found out that we were starting medical activities in Carrefour, they began crowding round the entrance,” said van Dillen. “Patients are being brought in wheelbarrows and carried on people's backs.”

There are other hospitals in the area but they are already overflowing with injured people and have limited numbers of Haitian staff or supplies.

The struggle to find yet more buildings that could be used for this work is continuing, as are the efforts to get more medical staff and supplies into the country. The major difficulty here is the bottleneck at the airport, which has turned away a number of vital cargo flights.

Lack of authorization to land at the airport has already caused a 24 hours delay to the planned arrival of MSF’s much needed inflatable hospital.

MSF has managed to get more than 70 extra international staff into Port au Prince but mostly through neighbouring Dominican Republic. They are beginning to take some of the strain off the 30 who were already there when the quake struck.

It has become clear that a number of our Haitian staff did not survive the devastation. MSF is still trying to confirm the whereabouts of others and is increasingly concerned about their welfare.

The teams report that food and water are also serious concerns and their lack is contributing to tension in the city. There has been little sign of significant aid distribution and there are increasing reports of looting, although not accompanied yet by violence.

MSF’s activities are rapidly scaling up and the next moves will be to assess different parts of the city, where needs are expected to be equally high. To help address the massive scale and variety of the assistance required, MSF hopes to start other medical activities as soon as possible, including mobile clinics, where there is no functional health structure, and mental health for people who have been traumatized.

Patients are being brought in wheelbarrows and carried on people's backs. Hans van Dillen

The struggle to find yet more buildings that could be used for this work is continuing, as are the efforts to get more medical staff and supplies into the country. The major difficulty here is the bottleneck at the airport, which has turned away a number of vital cargo flights.

Lack of authorization to land at the airport has already caused a 24 hours delay to the planned arrival of MSF’s much needed inflatable hospital.

MSF has managed to get more than 70 extra international staff into Port au Prince but mostly through neighbouring Dominican Republic. They are beginning to take some of the strain off the 30 who were already there when the quake struck.

It has become clear that a number of our Haitian staff did not survive the devastation. MSF is still trying to confirm the whereabouts of others and is increasingly concerned about their welfare.

The teams report that food and water are also serious concerns and their lack is contributing to tension in the city. There has been little sign of significant aid distribution and there are increasing reports of looting, although not accompanied yet by violence.

MSF’s activities are rapidly scaling up and the next moves will be to assess different parts of the city, where needs are expected to be equally high. To help address the massive scale and variety of the assistance required, MSF hopes to start other medical activities as soon as possible, including mobile clinics, where there is no functional health structure, and mental health for people who have been traumatized.

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Haiti
Project Update 15 July 2010