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Doctors face challenge in Haiti
by   |  September 28, 2004  |  

GONAIVES, Haiti — Doctors are performing amputations
without electricity or running water while waste from this
city’s shattered sewage system contaminates mud and
floodwaters, infecting wounds that threaten to turn gangrenous.

More than a week after the passage of Tropical Storm Jeanne, the
calamity in the northwest city of Gonaives has overwhelmed Haitians
and foreign rescue workers.

Thousands remain hungry. Jean-Claude Kompas, a New York doctor
who rushed to his native Haiti to volunteer his services last week,
says he has treated 30 people for gunshot wounds received in fights
over scarce food. Another of his patients was a child whose finger
was chopped off with a machete—possibly also over food.

Jeanne killed more than 1,500 and left 200,000 homeless in the
northwest city of Gonaives. With another 1,000 people reported
missing, the toll is sure to rise.

“It’s sad but true that the missing will slowly be
started to be counted among the dead,” said Brazilian Army
Gen. Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira, in charge of a U.N.
peacekeeping force in Haiti.

On Saturday, Pereira rushed 100 Uruguayan and 50 Argentine
troops to Gonaives, where gangsters and ordinary citizens have been
looting food aid. They reinforced 600 international troops and
police in the city.

Still, Pereira said he could use more help to ensure security of
food convoys and at food distribution points, which he said
increased from two to four on Monday for the 250,000 residents.

“If we had help from the National Police of Haiti, we
could possibly increase the aid distribution points,” he said
in a telephone interview.

But Haiti’s police force remains demoralized, understaffed
and poorly equipped since rebels chased them from their stations,
killing dozens, in a February uprising that led to the ouster of
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Haitian riot police sent to help
keep order last week were stoned by hungry and traumatized
residents.

Pereira said many storm survivors are suffering from diarrhea
while others, including many children, had infected wounds. Some
had gangrene and Argentine doctors had performed at least three
amputations under primitive conditions, he said. Most injuries are
gashes from collapsing roofs or pieces of zinc roof hidden by the
mud that still covers the city, where most walk barefoot.

“They have minimal conditions,” said Pereira.
“You have to understand that there isn’t even a
hospital there. It’s very difficult.” Gonaives’
general hospital was half buried in mudslides and floodwaters
believed to have killed many patients.

A makeshift hospital has been set up in two rooms of the State
University, with six stretchers on the floor of one room serving as
a ward, and two tables in the second room an operating theater. On
Sunday, doctors amputated the gangrenous leg of a man who died the
next morning.

Hours later, doctors rushed an expectant mother to a table, gave
her a local anesthetic, and cut open her abdomen in a bid to save
her baby. The child was stillborn. After trying to resuscitate it,
a Brazilian Army chaplain gave the infant the last rights. The
mother then held the baby before the corpse was taken away and
doctors started stitching up the slash in her stomach.

There was a pool of blood coagulating on the floor, which also
was stained by pus and other bodily fluids. A bucket of water stood
at the ready.

With no running water in the city, a reporter wondered how the
woman would keep her wound clean.

Kompas, who wore green surgeon scrubs that were drenched in
perspiration, said most cases he treated were open wounds infected
by bacteria in the contaminated water, including ones that can lead
to gangrene.

He expected to see cases of tetanus soon and said he, another
Haitian doctor and a handful of Argentinian Army medics cannot cope
with the scores of people needing treatment daily.

“There are no X-ray machines, not enough antibiotics, not
enough anesthesia, so a lot of procedures are very
rudimentary,” he said.

“The situation, we fear, is going to grow worse with all
of the bacteria in the water.”

A spokesman for the Argentine troops, Lt. Col. Gaston Irigoyen,
said military officers have been discussing ways to prevent
gangrene and other infections, such as wider use of antibiotics and
antiseptics.

Irigoyen said several particularly sick patients were evacuated
to a military hospital the Argentinians have set up at their base
in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Many nations and aid groups have sent planeloads of relief
supplies to Port-au-Prince. But getting them to Gonaives, and then
to the people who need them most, is a challenge.

Normally, it would take four hours to drive the concrete road _
worn to bedrock in parts _ that runs 90 miles northward from the
capital to this city. Since the storm, a 4-feet-deep lake has
formed just before the entrance to Gonaives; the lake is now
littered with mired aid trucks that could not make it through.

On the other side of Gonaives, National Route 1 _ the main
highway linking the capital to the country’s second-largest
city, Cap-Haitien _ has been cut. “It’s like a canyon,
not a road anymore,” said Andrea Pagnoli of the World Food
Program, who last week used donkey and mules to carry food to a
cut-off community northeast of Gonaives.

Chilean troops in the U.N. force have been ferrying supplies by
helicopter from Cap-Haitien, but not enough.

Communications are difficult, with landline telephone service
cut, cellular telephones providing only patchy service and even
satellite telephone connections difficult.

Successive Haitian governments, greedy and corrupt, never have
provided fundamental services for Haitians, who always managed to
fend for themselves in the informal sector that accounts for 80
percent of the economy.

With most residents homeless and without the means to barter,
they are at the mercy of the elements and criminal gangs that roam
at will.

Even before the storm, most residents of Gonaives, as in other
Haitian cities, used wells and springs for water. There are always
shortages of running water and electricity in Haiti. Medical care
is abysmal, with 1,000 physicians to serve a population of 8
million, and the vast majority of doctors based in
Port-au-Prince.

Medicines are in short supply, but also cost more than the
average Haitian, who makes less than $1 a day, can afford.

China is expected to send 130 police to Haiti to help bolster
the U.N. peacekeeping force, a State Department official said
Monday night. It is believed the deployment would be China’s
first in the Western Hemisphere.
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