Hurricanes' one-two punch inundates Haiti: Donations needed to support relief efforts
Posted on Sep 29, 2008
A Zanmi Lasante health worker wades through floodwaters to find missing HIV patients. |
Torrential rains from Hurricanes Gustav and Hanna swept through Haiti earlier this week, leaving behind dangerous flood waters and devastated communities.
”The situation is very dire and catastrophic and sad and frustrating,” writes Loune Viaud, Director of Operations of Zanmi Lasante (ZL), PIH’s partner organization in Haiti. She estimates that around 10,000 people have been displaced due to floodwaters in the Artibonite Valley, where PIH recently expanded operations to six facilities.
Full reports of the one-two punch delivered by the storms to the battered island of Hispaniola are currently hard to find, as news and media outlets had little time to focus attention from Gustav before Hanna roared through; and many instead turned their attention to Hanna’s path towards southern Florida.
Communications with Viaud and other PIH/ZL staff have painted a stark picture of desperation and destruction. In Gonaive, possibly the city hit hardest by the storms, patients and health workers were stranded on the roof of a submerged hospital. The Minister of Health of the Artibonite District phoned ZL from the roof of his house, asking for help to evacuate patients.
On Wednesday morning, members of Zanmi Lasante’s team trudged through swollen rivers, flooded streets, and muddy embankments in search of patients living in the low-lying areas. About 45 patients in ZL’s HIV program had homes underwater—fortunately, all have been accounted for, and are housed with neighbors and friends living on higher ground. But ZL fears that the situation may deteriorate even further, as Hurricane Ike approaches Haiti.
Flooded houses in Hinche, the capital of Haiti's Central Department | |
Although these storms have contributed to the current disaster in Haiti, the rampant poverty and lack of infrastructure throughout the region have exacerbated the impact of these and previous storms. Unlike New Orleans, there are no levees to hold back the water in many of the low-lying communities served by ZL. Mud huts without solid foundations, walls, or roofs are easily swept away; unpaved streets quickly degrade into muddy holes, hampering evacuation and relief efforts. Hospitals and health clinics lacked the infrastructure to safely evacuate patients, and ZL staff are worried about the looming public health problems in the wake of the storms—the spread of water-borne illness, lack of access to clean water, malaria.
The six facilities partnered with ZL in the Artibonite region are now preparing to handle a flood of patients in the coming weeks and months. These facilities are all in desperate need of resources and supplies, writes Loune.
[published September 2008]