Earthquake
Survivors Receive Lifesaving Care from UM Specialists in Haiti and Miami
Earthquake Survivors Receive Lifesaving
Care from UM Specialists in Haiti and
Miami
As a Miller School medical
team continues to work around the clock to save the lives of earthquake
survivors in Haiti, University of Miami doctors are treating patients evacuated from the devastated
country.
By noon Thursday,
emergency personnel at the University of Miami/Jackson Ryder Trauma Center had
admitted 11 patients injured in Haiti, a
number that grew almost hourly as search-and-rescue teams began digging victims
out of the incomprehensible rubble left in the wake of Tuesday's catastrophic
temblor.
The Ryder Trauma Center is
coordinating with other South Florida medical centers, including Jackson North and South and University
of Miami Hospital, to handle the anticipated flood of patients.
Among them was Christa Brelsford, a 25-year-old graduate student from Arizona State University who
lost her foot under the weight of a collapsing building. She counts herself
lucky.
"No other option," a
resilient Brelsford said from her bed at Ryder, where
surgeons amputated her right foot. "I could be dead. There were so many
times when I could have died."
A Miller School team
traveling on a donated private jet was among the first to arrive in the
devastated capital of Port-au-Prince Wednesday afternoon.
The plane returned to Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport
Wednesday night with seven injured patients and three UM nursing students who
were working with Project Medishare. The UM
initiative is dedicated to improving the health of the Haitian people by
establishing health services and infrastructure in communities.
Remaining behind in Haiti was
the medical team led by Barth Green, M.D., professor
and chairman of neurological surgery and co-founder of Project Medishare. Within five minutes of landing at the airport,
Green's team began treating critically wounded people, working desperately
through the night.
"They are working in a
provisional field hospital at the airport," said Eduardo de Marchena, M.D., professor of medicine and surgery and
associate dean for international medicine. "They're sleeping on cots,
eating what they can, and taking care of as many patients as they can."
They were joined by more
reinforcements today from UM, which will continue sending doctors and other
volunteers, as well as medical supplies and equipment, to Haiti for what De Marchena called a "large and prolonged” effort. By
Wednesday, more than 200 volunteers had signed up.
"Because of our
longstanding engagement in Haiti, we
feel a moral imperative to respond," said Arthur Fournier, M.D., associate
dean for community health and Project Medishare
co-founder. "More importantly, we have infrastructure and working
relationships in place that will make our response effective."
It is clear, though, from the
horrific images from Haiti that the scope of the work still to be done is eclipsed only by the
breadth of the suffering of the Haitian people.
At the Ryder Center, Brelsford seemed more anguished about the misery she left
behind in Haiti than she was about losing her foot. The grad student said she
arrived in Haiti on January 2 to help her brother with a literacy project. They were
in the second story of a house 12 miles south of the capital Tuesday when she
thought a car had hit the building.
Quickly realizing it was an
earthquake, she and her brother rushed downstairs. He made it out, she said,
but she stumbled, and fell on the stairs. Her lower legs were crushed when the
building collapsed.
After 30 minutes of digging,
helpers pulled Brelsford out of the rubble, and
rushed her by moped to a nearby city, where Sri Lankan peacekeepers treated
her. She was later airlifted to Miami.
"I am so thankful to be
alive," she said. "And so terribly sorry for the
people in Haiti who don't have adequate medical care."