Crisis in Haiti
Note: The GP editorial staff’s thoughts and hearts go out in solidarity to the residents of Port-au-Prince and their families, as well as our colleagues in Haiti. We will be updating this post as more information becomes available.
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Earthquake Crisis in Haiti
Original post by Wilnise Jasmin [01.14.2010 @ 6:53 AM EST]
As you may have already heard, a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck about 10 miles southwest of Port-au- Prince, Haiti at about 5 pm Tuesday night. The quake ravaged the infrastructure of Haiti’s fragile government and destroyed some of its most important cultural symbols.
“Parliament has collapsed,” Mr. Préval told The Miami Herald. “The tax office has collapsed. Schools have collapsed. Hospitals have collapsed. There are a lot of schools that have a lot of dead people in them.” He added: “All of the hospitals are packed with people. It is a catastrophe.”
President Obama promised that Haiti would have the “unwavering support” of the United States.
Haitian authorities and humanitarian aid organizations are struggling to respond amid devastation.
A Red Cross field team of officials from several nations had to spend Wednesday night in Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic to gather its staff before taking the six-hour drive in the morning across the border to the earthquake zone.
Here are some various ways to help with the recovery:
- American Red Cross
- Center for International Disaster Information
- On this website, there have been posts containing information about missing relatives. If anyone can possibly account for anyone please do.
- Partners In Health, and their partner organization in Haiti, Zanmi Lasante, are familiar to many of us from Tracy Kidder’s book Mountains Beyond Mountains. They have been working in Haiti for over 20 years, in times of emergency as well as in a long-term commitment to improving the health infrastructure. They are currently looking for qualified surgeons and nurses.
- More organizations
- Build a fundraising page with MercyCorps
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Updated [01.14.2010 @ 3 PM EST]: Key news items and op-eds:
- Barack Obama: “Unwavering support”
- U.S. grants temporary protection status to Haitians; sends troops
- Red Cross: 45,000-50,000 dead
- Tracy Kidder: Country Without a Net
- Bill Clinton: What we can do to help Haiti, now and beyond
- Nicolas Sarkozy: Time to end Haiti’s “curse”
Updated [01.14.2010 @ 11 PM EST]: US Military Plan of Action Established and Underway
Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates has shifted all of the resources of the US Department of Defense towards providing relief. General Douglas Fraser of the US Southern Command publically announced the Haiti relief plan on Thursday at a press conference held at the U.S. Southern Command Headquarters in Doral, Florida. The main areas addressed by Douglas focused on improving life sustaining capabilities and to provide assistance in the relief efforts in order to mitigate the suffering as soon as humanly possible. Some of the areas discussed:
- An initial Commander and Control has been set up until communication capability has been reestablished
- Opening the air field and making it operate on a 24/7 schedule
- 4 Coastguard cutters to provide helicopters and any additional support it can
- A navy destroyer will also be providing helicopter support as well as the fuel needed to keep all the helicopters running.
- A Threat and Disaster Relief assessment team has been organized in order to get an accurate survey of the extent of the damage
- Paratroopers have been dispatched
- Carrier USS Carl Vinson is scheduled to arrive on the morning of the 15th to provide additional helicopters and serve as the platform that will alleviate the organization problems faced due to the poorly established infrastructure that currently exists in Haiti
- Marines are scheduled to bring the heavy equipment necessary to provide capacity and capability on the 19th
- USNS Comfort hospital ship is is scheduled to arrive on the 22nd
Updated [01.15.2010 @ 12:30 PM EST]: The Big Picture
Two days later, the extent of the damage is seen in these harrowing photographs at the Boston Globe. Click on the image to see the photo-essay of devastation and rescue.
Updated [01.15.2010 @ 4 PM EST]:
Updated [01.15.2010 @ 8:30 PM EST]:
- Port-au- Prince is not the only area in Haiti that needs help.
Updated [01.16.2010 @ 10:30 AM EST]:
T-Mobile USA Waives Call Charges to and From Haiti
- T-Mobile USA is enabling phone calls for current customers to Haiti without charges for international long distance through January 31, 2010, and retroactive to the earthquake on January 12, 2010. Additionally, T-Mobile customers who may already be in Haiti will be able to roam on T-Mobile’s partner networks in Haiti (operated locally in Haiti under the names Voila and Digicel) free-of-charge through the end of the month.
- T- Mobile also pledge to assist in wireless restoration.
Updated [01.17.2010 @ 10:30 AM EST]: Prevention and Rebuilding
Many are asking if this tragedy that resulted from the earthquake could have been prevented. Back in 2008 two geophysicists who study fault lines in the Caribbean predicted that the fault line that Haiti sits upon called the Enriquillo fault could produce a 7.2 magnitude quake. The plates of the fault had been slipping past each other at about 7 millimeters per year for the last 250 years and the geophysicists predicted that it was time to snap.
While the earthquake could not have been prevented, the scientists believe that there was enough forewarning to implement emergency plans for when the earthquake would occur. While the limited resources of Haiti did not allow it to upgrade every single building standing, some buildings , such as hospitals and governmental buildings, could have been designated as critical and plans to strengthen these could been made. These areas could have served as the base from which all rescue efforts could be organized.
Unfortunately these plans were not made and to dwell on the errors of the past will not resolve the current problems that exist today. Once all rescue efforts have been exhausted, we can take learn from the errors that were made and not repeat them. When the reconstruction phase begins, NGO’s like Architecture for Humanity can work to ensure that another tragedy like the one that occurred this week will not recur.
Updated [01.17.2010 @ 11:30 AM EST]: Earthquake on Ocean Floor
On Sunday morning, a 6.3 magnitude earthquake was detected by seismologists In the Drake Passage on Atlantic Ocean floor between South America and Antarctica. The quake had no effect on nearby lands.
Updated [01.17.2010 @ 10:00 PM EST]
The CDC has deployed staff to Haiti to assist in the emergency response and guide the efforts to minimize public health impacts in the coming months. It has also updated several relevant resources for health care providers and responders:
- Guidance for Relief Workers and Others Traveling to Haiti for Earthquake Response
- Emergency Wound Management for Healthcare Professionals
- After an Earthquake: Management of Crush Injuries & Crush Syndrome
- CDC’s Earthquake Webpage
- Health Recommendations for Relief Workers Responding to Disasters
- Public Health Issues and Priorities for the Haiti Earthquake
- Travel Health Warning
- CDC Emergency Twitter account
- Haiti Disaster Volunteering
Updated by Jennifer Weinberg [01.19.2010 @ 9:00 am EST]
Partners in Health (PIH) is one of many organizations from around the globe dedicating efforts to the earthquake victims in Haiti. As this organization has been working in Haiti for over 25 years, they are in a unique position to understand the multitude of factors contributing to this tragedy.
Watch a PIH Executive Director Ophelia Dahl discuss the importance of long term rebuilding efforts with CBS’s Katie Couric.
Read an op-ed by PIH co-founder Paul Farmer focusing on the importance of building back better.
Updated [01.20.2010 @ 2:20 PM]:
As inquiries about volunteering in Haiti keep pouring in, while after-shocks rattle the island and life-saving supplies are turned away for lack of logistics support, the World Journal of Surgery shares some thoughts on the “cardinal sins” of humanitarian medicine.
Updated [01.20.2010 @ 8:30 PM]: More ways you can help
- If you are a health professional interested in volunteering to help, the American Academy of Family Physicians can link you organizations that are in Haiti.
- The Pan American Health and Education Foundation’s is an independent philanthropic organization working to build public health expertise to be able to innovatively lead development of healthier generations of people in the Americas. It has set up a Disaster Relief Fund to help bring critically needed emergency supplies for affected families and to support recovery efforts in Haiti.
- Habitat for Humanity has worked with Haiti for over 26 years and will continue to serve the people there by helping to rebuild.
- Nine Medical Teams International volunteer physicians and nurses are hard at work at various hospitals in Port au Prince. At Kings Hospital, a 350 bed inpatient facility that survived the earthquake the physicians are providing care to those who would have died without the help of the volunteers.
Updated [01.21.2010 @ 11:30 PM]: When Good Intentions Make Things Worse ; Record Donations; and Mass Movements
Haitian government figures relayed by the European Commission put the death toll at 200,000, with 80,000 buried in mass graves. The commission now estimates 2 million homeless, up from 1.5 million, and says 250,000 are in need of urgent aid. The countless number of untreated injuries that many Haitians still have will continue to add to the earthquake’s death toll. Lack of food and water will also contribute to the death toll. .” Partners in Health, an organization that has been providing health care in Haiti for two decades, estimated that 20,000 Haitians were dying daily from lack of surgery.
In an effort to prevent the loss of more lives, health experts have arrived in Haiti from Israel, Cuba, Portugal and other countries, many with stocks of medicine and supplies as well as extensive experience in disaster conditions. And the United States Navy hospital ship Comfort pulled up off the Haitian coast to handle the worst-off patients.
One of the problems with the relief effort is that there is a lack of organization and communication between the various aid agencies. “Nobody knows how many doctors, how many nurses have come to Haiti,” said Dr. Henriette Chamouillet, head of the World Health Organization in Haiti. “No one is providing the government with the data it needs.
Disaster organizers say good intentions gone wrong are another hindrance to the recovery effort.” Some examples include volunteer medical teams who have gone to Haiti on their own, without the support of established organizations that have the prior experience in disaster relief and working in developing nations, may actually use up the resources that could have been used to help the victims of the earthquake. Contacting one of the many organizations listed in the earlier updates of this post can help the individual healthcare worker allocate his or her skill sets in a way that will not take away from those that need aid.
For many organizations, donating money, rather than goods, is the better way to provide aid. Jeff Nene, a spokesman for Convoy of Hope, a Springfield, Mo., agency that feeds 11,000 children a day in Haiti, urges cash donations that allow his group to buy in bulk from large suppliers and retailers. “When people give $1, it translates into $7 in the field,” he said. “If they spend $5 for bottled water, that’s nice and it makes them feel good, but probably it costs us more than $5 to send it. If they give us $5, we can get $35 worth of water.”
According to the Chronicle of Philanthropy’s recently released a survey, donations to relief groups working in Haiti are breaking fund-raising records. The survey was based on a tally on proceeds reported by the nation’s 22 largest charities and it showed that US charities raised more than $150 million in the four days after the quake. The Chronicle’s survey doesn’t include the sums raised by smaller charities, such as the $25 million by Partners in Health. Among the biggest recipients was the American Red Cross, which has raised $87 million for Haiti so far. Small texted donations account for $16 million of the $150 million raised so far.
Despite the slow progress in coordinating the communications between the organizations providing aid in Haiti, the Haitian government has been able to begin the process of moving 400,00 earthquake victims to new settlements outside of the haphazard camps in Port-au- prince that have been set up in the days following the earthquake. The United Nations supports this move because the consolidation of the nearly 450 homeless encampments in Port-au-Prince alone will help to streamline food distribution.
Updated [01.30.2010 @ 1:20 PM]: Surveillance for Disease, and Advocacy for Investment
- Dr. James Wilson’s epidemiology surveillance of infectious disease outbreaks in Haiti: Operational Biosurveillance
- Dr. Paul Farmer’s testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: Video | Transcript
Updated [02. 18.2010 @ 9:30 AM]:In President Preval’s Own Words
The president of the Haiti talks about his initial response to the crisis.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


It’s important to understand that the key to help in Haiti at this moment is related to development to stabilize and assess damage. This is the work of UNICEF, PAHOWHO, USAID and RED Cross as well as governments. Relief organizations like PIH, CARE, NGOs and those in the faith community will be involved and begin to work once infrastructure has been stabilized. This is why it’s important to send donations now and save the care packages for later.
The death toll may be in the great than 200,000 and by some estimates 500,000.
The UN HQ has collapsed and there are 150 trapped in the rubble.
We can advocate and press officials and leaders to become involved and approve the sending of resources to Haiti. For example, the Office of Emergency Management is sending over heavy equipment.
While we mourn the overwhelming loss of life, our efforts must reach those who remain.
You do what you can and reach to other collective efforts. Expect to be involved now and for many months to come.
Katherine Ellington
Former, Global Pulse Editor
From the Washington Post
Haiti earthquake: How to help
Oxfam has an emergency team in the capital, Port-au-Prince, responding with public health, water, and sanitation services. You can donate online through its Haiti Earthquake Response Fund or by calling 1-800-77-OXFAM.
Partners In Health is taking contributions for relief efforts in Haiti, including medical supplies. The organization has had a presence in Haiti for more than 20 years, working to address the health care needs of the country’s poor.
You can donate to The Salvation Army’s efforts in Haiti by calling 800-SAL-ARMY (725-2769) or visiting their Web site and designating that your donation is for the Haiti earthquake.
The UN World Food Programme is accepting donations. Head of the WFP Josette Sheeran said the agency is deploying its resources in Haiti, including 86 metric tons of food. You can donate here.
National Nurses United has issued a call for nurse volunteers to provide assistance to those affected by the earthquake in Haiti.
To donate to specific relief efforts in Haiti:
United Nations Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF)
Mercy Corps
Save the Children
International Red Cross
World Vision
Catholic Relief Services
UNICEF
International Medical Corps
Network for Good
CARE
Operation USA
Operation Blessing International
Convoy of Hope
The Global Syndicate
GlobalGiving
Beyond Borders
Community Coalition for Haiti
International Orthodox Christian Charities
Baptist World Aid
Doctors Without Borders
Habitat for Humanity
Action Against Hunger
Direct Relief International
B’nai B’rith International
Bright Hope
Hope for Haiti
American Jewish World Service
World Relief
TractorShare
American Friends Service Committee
Food for the Poor
CHF International
The Lambi Fund of Haiti
Islamic Relief USA, in coordination with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
The State Department has set up a hotline for Americans to inquire after family in Haiti: 888-407-4747.
There are several ways to donate via mobile device:
• Text the word “Yele” to 501501 to donate $5 on behalf of the Yele Haiti Foundation, founded by Haitian musician Wyclef Jean.
• Text the word “Haiti” to 85944 to donate $5 on behalf of the Rescue Union Mission and MedCorp International.
• Text the word “Haiti” to 25383 to donate $5 on behalf of the Internal Rescue Committee.
• Text the word “Haiti” to 90999 to donate $10 on behalf of the American Red Cross.
• Text the word “Haiti” to 45678 (in Canada only) on behalf of the Salvation Army in Canada.
You can also find updated information and general ways to help during disasters at ReliefWeb, USAID and InterAction.
Thank you for sharing the many organizations that will be involved with the recovery process. I believe the recovery process will take many years and I hope the contributions continue well after the earthquake is no longer front page news.
Katherine and Wilnise, I absolutely agree. It is an additional level of tragedy for Haiti, to attract so much attention and help in times of massive disaster, when the human impact of these disasters would have certainly been reduced and mitigated in advance if there was more concern for the needs of Haitian people and the weaknesses of infrastructure in between the earthquakes and the cyclones. It is also perversely reinforcing of people’s prejudices of certain countries as “failed states” or “hot zones”, when news coverage is only attracted there in times of great trouble. There are so many inspiring and consistent stories of Haiti’s citizens as well as the foreign organizations who work there. They need extra help now, but they need us to also remember the stories of success and resilience as well as those of tragedy.
“Mud Mothers”, an amazing poem by Lenelle Moïse:
the children of haiti
are not mythological
we are starving
or eating salty cakes
made of clay
because in 1804 we felled
our former slave captors
the graceless losers sunk
vindictive yellow
teeth into our forests
what was green is now
dust & everyone knows
trees unleash oxygen
(another humble word
for life)
they took off
with our torn branches
beheaded our future
stuck our breath up on pikes
for all the world to see
we are a living dead example
of what happens to warriors who?
in lieu of fighting for white men’s countries?
dare to fight
for their own lives
during carnival
we could care less
about our bloated empty bellies
where there are voices
we are dancing
where there is vodou
we are horses
where there are drums
we are possessed
with joy & stubborn jamboree
but when the makeshift
trumpet player
runs out of rhythmic breath
the only sound left is guts
grumbling
& we sigh
to remember
that food
& freedom
are not free
is haiti really free
if our babies die starving?
if we cannot write our names
read our rights keep
our leaders in their seats?
can we be free
really? if our mothers are mud? if dead
columbus keeps cursing us
& nothing changes
when we curse back
we are a proud resilient people
though we return to dust daily
salt gray clay with hot black tears
savor snot cakes
over suicide
we are hungry
creative people
sip bits of laughter
when we are thirsty
dance despite
this asthma
called debt
congesting
legendarily liberated
lungs
(From a post on Velvetpark)
There are many who believe that America should not be giving money to the Haitian relief efforts , but should rather focus on fixing all the problems at home before we as American take on the problems of the world. I believe those who hold that belief should spend some time living abroad and learn about other cultures first hand. This might lead them to see that the problems of the world cannot be separated and categorized as mine and yours, they are for all of us to share and to work together to resolve right now, the rest of today, tomorrow and every day. We all can learn from each other’s mistakes and really improve the status of planet earth.
I’m glad that the media is covering all the diasters of the world to make people aware of the needs of many people of Haiti and the need of support any way. I’m glad that people are stepping up and giving a hand to another human being. It is sad that it took a natural diaster to get people pour their hearts and money to country of Haiti. Where were these people 6 months ago or even a year ago to help the people of Haiti and i hope it will continue after the media goes away from this natural diaster.
Thank you for your reply Hollywood,
I think you hit the nail on the head when you mentioned awareness. While it is sad that it took this massive disaster to raise awareness of all the suffering taking place in Haiti, I do believe that it was this disaster that allowed those donating to Haiti to realize how fortunate they were to be in a position to provide some aide. No matter how much there seemed to be the need to restrict how our money was being spent in a time when job cutbacks resulting from our the downturing economy , the human connection rose above the us versus them mentality and see the common humanity we all share.