Monday, February 8, 2010

Haiti Recap

Haiti Recap

I am blown away by our Lord’s goodness.

I know that sounds contradictory amidst the Haitian earthquake suffering, and all the “How could a good God allow it” questions. But it is how I feel, and I know it to be true.

There were innumerable moments of His working, both in Haiti and back home, during my 9 days on the island. We estimate over two thousand people were praying for the team. Uncanny timing of solutions and working out of big problems occurred in an area of the world where transportation, communication, and power are unreliable (see some stories below).

We flew out on a Monday afternoon. There were no hiccups with the flights except that the trip organizers had misspelled my name, which drew me a trip through the body scanner at DFW airport. We arrived in Santa Domingo, DR at midnight. From there we traveled 6 hours in a very crowded bus to the border town, Jimani, DR. We hung out at a state-run hospital which was staffed by a Dominican team of physicians. There were about 60 Haitians lying on beds and every available floor surface. Many were reaching their hands out to us asking for help and pain relief. I felt terrible that I couldn’t use our meds and equipment. We prayed for many, and then left them to the good care of the Dominican team.

Elsewhere in Jimani, some missionaries had created a very functional, makeshift hospital. Located on the 10-acre grounds of an old, white-stone orphanage, the hospital provided 4 operating rooms, a chapel which held about 100 post-op patients, and dormitories for the hundreds of Haitians arriving and waiting to be seen.

The folks in charge assigned most of us to the not-yet-seen group. I spent that day triaging, cleaning and dressing wounds, giving antibiotics, and splinting fractures. The sickest received first priority for surgery, and part of my job was to identify those who were nearest death or loss of limb. An eccentric American veterinarian setup our pharmacy. It worked wonderfully.

The Haitians were lying on single mattresses, inches from the other injured. They ate, moaned and took care of bodily functions in that setting. Most spoke only Creole or French. A few were bilingual and became interpreters for the medical teams. Overall, they seemed in shock at what had happened to their city, their dead family members and their broken bodies. But none were hysterical, inappropriate or violent. We prayed, at length and with fervor for each one we treated that day. Prayer moved many of them and us to tears.

While we treated and triaged, more injured arrived throughout the day. Most came in the beds of pickup trucks, bouncing along the pot-holed road between Jimani and Port-au-Prince. With broken bones not yet set and splinted, they suffered greatly during the 3 hour trip. Helicopters transported the few who were the most ill. At one point, there were helicopters coming and going every 30 minutes. Some of the worst injuries were a 30% burn victim, a back wound extending through the vertebral bone and into the spinal cord, and a chest crush which required a chest tube. There were many with broken femurs. The physician in charge told the rest of us that one of our goals was to make sure there were no deaths in the non-acute section. I made sure that any of mine that were looking especially ill were moved to the acute area. Several of the sickest had died overnight. Fortunately, their pain was controlled. There were several pregnant women with long-bone fractures, and lots of wound infections. One lady was missing a fair amount of skin on her left 3rd and 4th fingers. With good wound treatment she can hope for pretty good healing and a modest return of function.

We remained at the hospital until mid-afternoon. Having not slept or eaten since the previous day, we were physically and emotionally exhausted. The adrenaline had worn off and I was feeling a bit woozy. I tried to drink lots of fluids and I ate as much beef jerkey and as many Cliff Bars that I could get my hands on. I must have looked awful. Our team leader moved us to a local Episcopal church where we took turns showering, and then resting on floormats. It seemed very comfortable, and the weather was beautiful. A cool breeze blew through the big room. Some of us sang together, some slept, and others read. I think we were numbed by what we had seen. Later, after the trip was over, I was able to process what I seen. But while in Haiti and the DR, I just reacted to the need in front of me and moved to the next.

Our team leader, who had planned for us to continue on to PaP, was considering staying in Jimani. The local missionaries warned us about the trip dangers: some vigilanties were throwing bodies onto the road to stop and then rob travelers. Our bus drivers insisted that the road into Pap was too dangerous and refused to go. But, our leader met a World Vision associate who told us about a Christian school in PaP that had become a command center for medical teams like ours. And, sometime during that day, he saw a vision of a bulls-eye, indicating to him that God wanted us to go to the center of the damage.

He decided to find a new bus and driver and leave for PaP the next day. After a good sleep and waking to what felt like an aftershock tremor, most of us went back to the Jimani hospital while a few worked on procuring a new bus and driver. That tremor we felt was the 6.1 earthquake that struck PaP on Wednesday morning. We acquired a bus in time to make it to the border by the 2PM cutoff. The border officials closed the Haiti entrance to white-skinned people at that time of day because it was dangerous for us to be on the road after dark.

God protected us during an uneventful 3-hour ride into PaP. We had to turn around and re-route once or twice in the city because of road damage or downed power lines. The converted school turned out to be the perfect place for our team. It was completely undamaged, walled in, shared with us by about 40 US soldiers and Humvees. There wasn’t a safer place in PaP. The school officials had sent all the kids home (they boarded the students), moved all the computers to one command room, and provided food for us and a place to sleep. They told us their goal was to keep us safe, to transport us daily to the places in PaP which were the hardest hit and medically unserved, and get us back before sunset.

At the Quisqueya Christian School there were already two other medical groups, one from Germany, the other from Virginia. By the time we left, there were probably 10 groups, from all over the world, all Christian-based and all medical. It was a beautiful picture of the body of Christ. One German doctor said to me in thickly-accented English, “You know Brian, we are all here because we serve the Lord.” The food was good enough. We slept on camping mats. Someone ran a water hose and spray nozzle through the ceiling of a tool shed, so we had a shower the last 3-4 days. Given the weather, which was temps in the lower 90’s and high humidity, we were delighted to have the waterhose showerhouse.

The first stop in PaP for us was a hard-hit orphanage. Of the 75 original kids, 40 had perished. Their bodies remained under the broken buildings. The orphanage workers kept the surviving children in a courtyard in front of the old buildings. Some kids were lying in the back and front seats of a run-down economy car. A few were sequestered under a tree and two of the adults tended their wounds. These were the most severely injured kids. One had a large face laceration, which we sutured. Another had a right femur fracture with an overlying wound. Our transporters evacuated that child to a US Navy hospital. The remaining children suffered minor to moderate wounds, which we treated with wound debridement, antibiotics, and instructions to the orphanage staff regarding ongoing care. As one typically sees in orphanages, all the kids wanted to be held. We loved on them for the hour or so we stayed. Fox News showed up and took some video of the children. Later, CNN and some other networks did a story on the orphanage.

From there we carried our supplies, about 6-7 good sized crates and 3-4 duffles full of medical supplies, ¼ mile to a tent city forming on a soccer field. We setup two tents to function as clinics and started seeing patients. The Haitians did a good job of spreading word around the area to bring the most severely injured. That day the three of us doctors saw a total of 200 or so patients. I saw mostly orthopedic injuries and wounds. Again, we prayed and laid hands on each one we saw.

I treated some of the most gruesome injuries I have ever encountered as a physician. One 15 year-old girl suffered a crushed right lower leg. The twisted fibula bone stuck out through the skin above the ankle. The foot was rotated inward almost 90 degrees. The whole lower leg smelled from the infection that was eating her flesh and ascending almost to her knee. After trying to arrange transport and cleaning her wounds, I talked to the other docs about attempting a field amputation at the knee. We decided to wait a few hours for a transport before proceeding. Our driver, who traversed PaP daily, at anytime could be several hours away. In the city, roads and communication systems were unreliable, so arranging for emergent transportation was a near impossibility. After only about 15 minutes, our transport driver and van just showed up at our clinic. He said he felt like we might need an emergent transport. I could hardly believe it when I saw him. I was pleased that this precious young lady would get a ride to the hospital, and blown away by how God arranged it. For the first time, I broke down emotionally and cried.

What moved me to tears was not just seeing God’s hand and timing with our patient’s transport. It was seeing the poor girl who was about to lose her leg and the other two patients who arrived right after she did who also required amputation as a life-saving procedure. All three received a ride to the Navy hospital. I heard that the Navy personnel put the two worst on the next helicopter to the hospital ship parked in the PaP bay.

There was a 30-year-old woman who was cooking beans when the quake struck. The beans and boiling water spilled onto her bare feet, causing full-thickness burns on the tops of both feet. Several team members walked into the nearby neighborhood to look for untreated people and saw her feet. They were black and charred. It took them an hour to coax her to be brought to our clinic. She believed her feet would heal on their own. These types of burns are life and limb threatening. The heat damages the underlying tendons, nerves, and blood vessels, which die and become infected. Working with two members of our team, we soaked her feet in an iodine/water mixture, and began the slow process of removing the dead tissue. As we cleaned the burned feet, the skin and fat sloughed off in large pieces, revealing the deep, live tissue underneath. This woman would require weeks if not months of hospitalizations, surgeries, and infection treatment.

On that day, I had three patients that needed transportation to a hospital, but none required emergent treatment. We decided to carry them to our bus which was parked about 4 blocks away. During that walk, someone had setup a food distribution right in our path. The uneven, narrow road was congested with hundreds of folks trying to get to the bags of rice. While four of us carried each patient, several of our team went ahead to clear a path. It was a dangerous moment. Sometimes, I had heard, Haitians will try to mob and steal from Americans. But this 8-10 minute trip ended successfully, with the three patients, all 10 team members, and about 8 duffels and crates loaded onto our bus.

After we arrived back at Quisqueya School that afternoon, we tried, but failed to arrange helicopter transport for these patients. A couple of the German physicians overheard us and offered to take the patients to their hospital, which was a 5-minute drive away. Norman, who was the German physician who approached us, was about 6 foot 4 inches tall, and spoke with a deep German-accented voice. He was an imposing figure. He and I visited at the end of most days, and even played a little soccer. It seemed that we enjoyed the escapism of a soccer match.

During these first few days in PaP we met and were befriended by some wonderful Haitians. Three were brothers, who had seen some family members die. They got to us because they were multi-lingual, and we needed their interpretation assistance. These men were intelligent, somewhat educated, humble, articulate, and a delight to work with. They prayed alongside us, and after a few days were leading prayer with the injured Haitians. These guys are unemployed. If they lived in a developed economy they would be sought after and would have meaningful professions. As it is, they, and Haitians just like them, manage by living day-to-day, finding any way they can to just have enough food.

At Quisqueya school, new teams were showing up almost daily. By the time I left, there were over two hundred people living there. We all slept either in the school rooms or in tents wherever there was space. I could walk out in the morning and see a cluster of Koreans on my left and some tents where the German team slept. At mealtime, I could hear multiple languages being spoken. Most of the people I saw there seemed in good spirits, but the stress of it all was taking its toll on all of us. Our team stayed a total of 9 days. I don’t recommend staying any longer than that. Waco-based Antioch Community Church, the organization I was with, sent a second team which arrived the day we left. A third Antioch team would arrive a week later, and a long-term team after that. I appreciated being a part of a group that had a long-term view. I didn’t want to feel like we were abandoning the Haitians after we left.

The folks in charge sent a group of us to a small, unused hospital about a 25 minute drive from the school. We opened a clinic and started taking inpatients, mostly post-operative cases. One man we saw had extensive wounds. One of our nurses worked for about an hour and a half on him. It seemed that whenever we finished with one wound, we would find another on the back of his leg or some other area. With antibiotics, wound care, and follow-up, he had a good chance of not losing any limbs or his life.

A Haitian physician assisted us by seeing patients in the streets. She was about 50, and had pretty wild, strawberry-dyed hair, and spoke and worked quickly. Someone gave her the nickname Tina Turner. We all saw dozens of patients that first day. We were slow the second day. On the third day I saw many of the patients we had treated the previous days. It was rewarding to see that their wounds were healing, and they were more comfortable in the splints and casts. I am frustrated that I didn’t take more pictures because I cannot remember many of their faces.

One 25-year old woman who had suffered a left shoulder dislocation, was seeing a doctor for the first time since the quake, about 9 days. She had a quiet demeanor, and spoke to me through an interpreter. I told her there was a good chance we could get the shoulder back in place, and set her up on an exam table for the treatment. As I was hooking up the arm traction, she turned her face to me, and with a few tears on her cheeks, said in perfect English, “My mother died.” A few of my team members, including one of our interpreters, laid hands on her and prayed for a long time. I couldn’t get the shoulder back in despite the usual techniques. And the morphine was causing her to have nausea and vomiting. We sent her to another hospital for general anesthesia. When a shoulder has been out of socket for more than a few days, the muscles clamp down like concrete, and it is almost impossible to reduce the joint into place. She made it to the hospital and was treated by an orthopedic surgeon.

I walked around this little hospital several times to get a sense of the neighborhood and the people. Most were just sitting in their yards all day long. The younger folks played soccer and dominoes. One guy had a guitar. The city sits on large rolling hills, making for spectacular views. Low-flying helicopters continued to traverse the sky, almost one every 15 minutes. There was an orphanage, all girls, situated next to the hospital. It was a joyful place. The girls were fixing each others’ hair. In my best French I told all the little ones how pretty they were.

At the end of our days, we gathered as a team and shared stories, thoughts, concerns, and prayer requests. We would break into two or three and pray for each other, the Haitians, and the teams. After our last day, we listened to a licensed counselor talk about post-traumatic stress, and what we would experience after we returned home. It was helpful and continues to be so.

On the morning of our departure we had planned to go early to the airport and pray for a ride home. I enjoyed sitting on the tarmac watching the giant planes and helicopters come and go. We hitched rides with people flying two business jets, a first-class treatment. It was a delight. I had my first cold bottle of water in a week. We landed in Ft. Lauderdale and were greeted by four armed immigration officials and a German shepherd who sniffed each of our bags. All of us wanted hamburgers, fries, and cokes. There was a Chili’s in the airport.

Let me close by saying that the woman who is my wife is an exceptional person. She handled many unforeseen tasks, such as counseling our kids who were worried their father would get hurt in Haiti. She took on one of my projects which couldn’t wait for my return. She gave an interview to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, and posted our texting online.

The Antioch folks showed that they know how to do disaster relief mission trips. I was struck by the way they asked God for direction, and then waited until they heard before making a decision. They were professional, prayerful, excellent in providing medical care, and respectful of the team’s needs. It was a joy to work with them.

Lastly, I love Jesus. All death, sorrow and brokenness are captured in the awfulness of the cross. He doesn’t run from suffering. He doesn’t wear out when we are hurt, and leave us to figure it out. He shows up when and where we are hurting. I don’t believe he wants just happiness for us. His plan for us takes us into darkness, for it is there that we most clearly see the light of the world.

Brian Byrd, February, 2010











Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Home

Hey everyone,
I made it home tonight.  I can't thank everyone enough for praying for our team.  We felt God's guidance and protection many times, and through the end of the trip. 
Thanks also for praying for and helping Stephanie. 
I'll update the blog when I have a chance later this week or early next.
Please remember the Haitians.  They are suffering and it is just awful there.
God's blessings,
Brian

Coming Home II

The second group just got on a flight out of PAP! Now pray for a quick, smooth flight to Ft Lauderdale. And pray they will be able to get through customs quickly as well.

They will arrive back in Waco between 8:30-9pm. They will be arriving here at the church offices so if you are picking up your loved one, plan on being here about that time.

Thanks!
heather

Coming Home

Hi, everyone!

Sorry for the abrupt halt in communication the last few days. Brian accidentally dropped his phone in the sink while washing clothes Sunday night, so messages from Haiti have been few and brief since then. About 20 minutes ago I received word that a group of 7, including Brian and Larry, landed in Fort Lauderdale. They were able to ride on a company lear jet. As you can read in the message below, it sounds like the rest are still trying to get on a plane to Florida.

Steph

********************
Hi All,

Can you take a minute RIGHT NOW to pray? Half our team got on a flight this morning to Ft. Lauderdale . The other half is still there awaiting transport to Ft. Lauderdale . The entire team is scheduled on a 4:30pm flight out of Ft Lauderdale. Please pray that the 2nd half of the team gets to Ft Lauderdale in time for this flight!!!

They are scheduled to land in DFW tonight around 6:45pm. Praise God! I will get you more info when I know for sure they are all going to be on that flight.

The team members still in PAP trying to get out:
Kevin
Mark
Trinity
Mark
Kate
Evy

Thanks!
Heather

Monday, January 25, 2010

Monday

Well, we received a message from Brian last night that his phone was probably not going to work today. Steph received an email this morning via the school they are staying at. All is well and they have a flight lined up for tomorrow.

David

Sunday, January 24, 2010

AMI update

Hi Everyone,
 
Sorry about the lack of communication yesterday. I just didn’t get a chance to sit down long enough to type something up.
 
I spoke to the team this morning. They are all doing well and seem to be in a little more of a routine. They are back at the same hospital today that they have been at a couple of days now. They are still seeing the same wounds though the onslaught has slowed a bit – possibly because they are not hitting new locations. As things have settled, there has been great communication and coordination between our team and some others that they are working alongside. It is really a picture of the body of Christ working all together!
 
One encouraging story that our pastor shared this morning (he just returned last night): There was a young boy with a broken arm, broken leg, and head injury. Our team did not have the means to treat his possible brain injury but knew he needed help immediately. A young man that has been working with our team took this boy and started to drive him to get help. He drove to the airport and as God would have it, Sanjay Gupta (CNN’s neurosurgeon/reporter) was finishing up a report and the boy was taken over to him. With Dr. Gupta’s assistance, within minutes the boy was on a helicopter being flown to the USS Comfort, a floating navy hospital right off the coast of Haiti . Miracles like this are happening every day!
 
One specific prayer request from the team- one of the team members is sick today – achy and feverish. Please lift him up and ask that he will be quickly and completely healed so he can continue to minister to the Haitians!
 
The next medical team departs less than 12 hours to head over. They are bringing much fresh supplies as well as fresh energy and excitement to serve. Please continue to lift up this team as they will be there until Jan 31.
 
Here is another article that mentions our team at work http://www.redeemhaiti.org/ They are certainly getting good coverage!!
 
For His Glory,
Heather

Sunday morning update

I heard from Brian via text message this morning.  He said:

"All is well here. At same hospital as yesterday. A lot slower. We are bringing in 15 post-op patients who will stay here until well. Two of us will remain here overnight.

Still seeing fractures, dislocations, and wounds. I think the Haitians are beginning to grieve, now that the shock is over and life is returning to somewhere closer to normal. They are telling me about their relatives who died.

We had been in an air-conditioned bus, but today we rode in a caged flatbed truck. We could smell rotting bodies as we drove through town."

No news from Brian on the church. There is hope that the 2 girls may be able to fly out Tuesday on a Baptist General Convention of Texas plane.

Steph

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Ben and Katie in Haiti

Wanted to share this link. It is the blog of a young missionary couple, Ben and Katie, who work at the compound where Brian and the team are staying. It is neat to get a different perspective of life at "home" as Brian referred to it.

http://www.benandkatieinhaiti.com/

Also, Ben and Katie are from Dallas and Katie used to go to Antioch Church when she was in college in Waco. She is the one helping us get medical aid to the ECC and also working on getting those two girls out of Haiti and to Dallas. Some God-ordained connections here, I do believe.

From Debbie

Sat Evening Update

Just talked to Brian...

He sounded great. Said the clinic was lighter today so they came back a little earlier than they had been, around 5:00. He took a shower (I think he said it was his first?) and rested and said he feels much better and ready to go again. He actually referred to the compound where they were staying as "home." I think it is safe to say that he feels very comfortable there.

He said their group is sleeping on mats in a second grade classroom (I think he said second grade). He said he placed his mat right by the door and has been jumping up at the slightest shifting of the ground. Apparently he was ready to sound an alarm last night, but someone said, "Don't worry about that. It's just a tremor." I can only imagine what Brian is going to do next time it thunders at our house. Not that I blame him, of course.

Brian said Larry did surgery on some femurs yesterday. He's not sure what Larry did today because he's not back yet.

He said most of them did the same kind of medical work today as they had been doing - treating crush injuries. He said they spent an hour and a half on a man who had been stuck under the rubble for two days. He said it's hard not knowing how things will turn out for particular patients.

Brian reiterated again how much he has enjoyed being with this particular team. He said, "These people from Antioch really know how to do mission trips!" He said everything has gone very smoothly. The team leaders pray through all their decisions.

The team is working on options for flying out of PAP, rather than driving back to the Dominican Republic. So you might pray about that.

Steph

Getting the Team home

Brian and the team need help getting out of Port Au Prince.

If anyone has information regarding flights out of Haiti, please contact Heather.

heather-bonney (at) aminternational (dot) org
office 254.754-0386::129

Saturday Morning

Not much news to report. Just wanted to let you all know that I had spoken briefly with Brian by phone last night and exchanged a few short text messages this morning. All is well with the team.

Brian said this morning that they were setting up in a "real" clinic and that it was pretty nice. They may need to move back outside, though, because the Haitians, understandably, are afraid to be inside.

Brian said he is fatigued, so you might pray for strength and energy for him.

He said that so far, in every location they have been to, the medical need has been overwhelming. So they plan to go strong all day as long as there are people in need of medical care.

No word this morning (at least as far as I am aware) on getting the 2 girls out of Haiti or about the pastor/church many of you are trying to reach. I am hopeful that someone is making progress on both of those matters, though. Brian has reported them to the leadership and in both cases someone was going to try to make some headway. I'm sorry I don't have more to report.

Thanks for your continued prayers!
Steph

Friday, January 22, 2010

2 Girls Coming to the US - Info

I have cleared up all of the info for taking the 2 girls back to Dallas on the private plane. I know this may not be possible, but if it is, it would be a HUGE service to this family who are in shock and do not have enough to take care of themselves much less their girls.
If this will work please let me know.
One more thing....I am trying to use Google Earth to get the coordinates for you, but may not be able to do so.


This is the info:

Names of Father: Wadestrant (Wawa)
Email: jbwadestrant (at) juno (dot) com
Phone: none working now

Dallas Contact picking up the girls: Frances Sawyer home 972 386 0747 Cell 972 898 5114

I have confirmed that all of the papers are in order, passports and visas. The parents and children have promised me that they will be at that address for the next 24 hours and will NOT leave. They will have the girls packed and ready to leave. They completely understand that you may not be able to do this and since we don't have contact with them regularly, they promised to be ready and stay ready in the event this works out.

We are forever grateful for your help and love for the Haitian people.
Debbie
214 361 9955

More Pics from Brian




Friday Morning Update

If you have facebook, Brian has been posting some photos and videos there. I think you have to already have been a "friend" to Brian to see them, though. Perhaps I should have done that before he left!

In case any of you are connected with a group heading to the Dominican Republic or Haiti in the near future, I am also including a text he sent for a group in Arizona that departs Saturday (?):

It's warm, so bring a soft mat to sleep on and nothing more than a sheet for cover. Breakaway cargo pants are nice. Sunscreen is important. iphone is working well.

If coming to PAP bring external fixator devices for femur fractures. If going to the hospital area in Jimani, bring a surgery tent, complete with ortho tools and all items needed for anesthesia. Regardless of where you go, we wish we had brought more injectable morphine, casting/splinting supplies, crutches, and IV supplies.

Also, Brian sent a written description of the story he told me last night over the phone. I am going to copy it here in case any medical teams that have not yet left the States can make use of the information.

"This 15 year old girl suffered a right leg compound fracture. The ankle bone was sticking out of the skin, and her pain was agonal. As I unwrapped her bandages I could smell gangrene. In fact, almost he entire lower leg was gangrenous. We started an IV, gave her some antibiotics and pain control, and considered taking the leg off at the knee. I asked our team leader to get a transport, but he had no signal. A few minutes later two more people with injuries requiring amputation arrived.
I began working on the other - trying to relieve their pain, getting a splint on the fracture, that sort of thing. A few minutes later, our transport guy drove up and said he felt like we might need a transport.
I couldn't believe it. It was our Lord. It was like an angel came to us. Two of the three were flown by heli to a Navy surgical ship. Praise God! The other I did not hear about."

Finally, here are the texts Brian sent early this morning:

I left the compound before anyone checked on the church. I may know something tonight. [He did pass on the information to leaders at the compound last night, so they know about the situation and hopefully someone is able to make some progress there.]

The team had good corporate worship this morning. They are headed back to the tent village where they saw patients yesterday. He is praying James 1:2-4

Video from Haiti and news stories

Here is an orphanage where Brian is treating kids. You can see him briefly at the beginning.

Here is a link to some video from Fox News of our team at work. GO team! http://www.kyte.tv/ch/329916-adamhousley/757733-help-haiti-orphans

And here are 2 links to articles about the team:

http://www.baylor.edu/lariat/news.php?action=story&story=67805

http://www.star-telegram.com/metro_news/story/1909556.html

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Thur night update

Brian called tonight. Here is the latest:

Brian said he is pretty worn out, that it has been physically challenging. It is hot. They are drinking lots of fluids. The food is just ok when they're out and about - granola bars - but great at the compound where they are staying.

He was anxious to tell me a story about a 14-year-old girl he saw today in the tent village in PAP. She had a splint on her leg and was writhing in pain. He could smell it and see that her entire lower leg was gangrenous. He took the old dressings off and gave her a shot of antibiotics. He knew she needed to get to a hospital immediately, but they had no means of transport. They were calling around trying to find transportation for her, and when he turned around the guy they were trying to reach was standing there and he said he came because he thought they might need to transport someone to the hospital. Within minutes she was on a helicopter.

Another person came in with a similar situation and was taken to have surgery. Then another, but Brian wasn't sure what happened with the third patient. He said he had never seen anything like this, especially in such volume.

Brian said that traveling within PAP takes a long time. There are people and debris in the streets. He said they drove 2 hours from the compound where they are staying to where they worked today, and then 2 hours back to the compound at the end of the day.

At the first place they went today, the orphanage that started with about 75 kids and where about 40 had died in the earthquake, Fox news was there videotaping. He said the children there were young, mostly under two years of age, and crunched up. He said it was heartbreaking. There were wounds, the children were crying. When the team finished there they ate and sat in a circle on a soccer field and talked and prayed.

Brian said that Larry had a good day at a hospital. They had x-rays there. Larry and another orthopedist put on casts all day for broken closed bones. Larry may go back to that hospital tomorrow. There are 40 broken femurs at this one hospital, and they all need to be fixed in the operating room.

On a side note, some friends of ours have a connection to a church in PAP where we think there are some people camped out. There were apparently up to 1500 people there a few days ago, but many have left due to lack of food, water, and medical attention. The pastor of this church drove to the Dominican Republic Monday for help, but his car broke down and he is stuck in the DR. We think the church may be located on the same street as the compound where the team is staying. Brian is going to see if someone knows anything about the location of the church and whether or not they can get any help there. It would be great if you could include this church in your prayers.

The team is going to try to get some good rest tonight.

ECC Haiti Recovery

Facebook link from Debbie.

"Do you know of a way for a group of approximately 1500 people at the Evangelical Christian Church in Haiti to get some desperately needed care? I personally know the pastor (a native Haitian) and these people have no food, water, or medical care."

Contact:
Debbie Dittrich
214 361 9955
Debbie (at)Followinghim (dot)com

ECC Haiti

Jan 21 - Port Au Prince

Finishing up a day of seeing Haitians previously unseen. Awful injuries. Terrible wounds. We're making a huge difference. Lots of prayers for healing and new belief in Jesus.

Felt a tremor a few hours ago. I am outside, so I'm safe. The Haitians are scared of being inside so they are living in tent cities.

I'll post some pictures on Facebook tonight. I don't have email.

We are well hydrated and decently fed, but we haven't showered - we all stink!

Meeting some wonderful, educated, talented Haitians who have no job. In the States these people would have great jobs. It is sad for them.

This team I am with is just amazing. They have a heart for people living in poverty and for missions.

Official Team Update AMI #3

An eventful day yesterday…the team made it into PAP yesterday afternoon after a long bus ride. They have seen a lot more of the damage first hand but have felt safe as they travel. They will be lodging nights at Quisqueya Christian College and heading out during the days to surrounding areas that need assistance. The good news about this location is that there are US military staying at the base as well so they feel very secure.
Today they are heading to an orphanage on the outskirts of town that has not received help yet. I am sure we will be getting reports back from their time there later today. They were told that this orphanage had 2000 students but do not know how many survived. They are expecting to see many of the same injuries they have already seen – crush injuries, broken bones, puncture wounds, etc.
God orchestrated a plane for our senior pastor and his wife to fly in this morning. Ross Perot’s company sent a plane full of doctors and supplies and we were able to secure 2 seats on the plane for Jimmy & Laura! They also were able to take in specific supplies that the doctors had requested. PLEASE PRAY however as I spoke to them this morning when the plane arrived and the supplies got mixed up somehow and now have gone missing. PRAY that our supplies would be identified and we would be able to quickly get them where they need to go!
Everyone continues to do well and we have reports that the team dynamics are wonderful. They have sufficient food and water and continue to have great favor with authorities there!

Port Au Prince cont'd

9:25 a.m. Just left the orphanage where 30 of the 75 kids had died. I saw the rubble heaps where some remained. Awful smells. A few of the kids were in awful shape. We are sending 1 to the hospital for leg surgery. The others should be fine now with the wound treatments.

We are setting up aside a rather large tent city, size of a football field. It is chaos. We are in a safe place, up a hill, under a covered porch.

News from Port Au Prince

At 6:24 this morning, our time, Brian said they were just outside the US embassy in Port-au-Prince. Food lines. Lots of building damage. No violence. Thousands of people filled the streets when the sun came up, he said. About one in two buildings there had been leveled.

Brian said they were setting up a clinic in an orphanage. Half of the group would be staying there; the rest would go to another clinic a little further north. Most of the kids at this particular orphanage had survived so far. Brian said the kids and the workers looked pretty good. There was a pretty long line of folks outside. They heard yesterday that the relief group was coming. Not a lot of bad injuries that he could see.

He also said that there was a small tent city set up there. On the drive earlier this morning they passed miles of broken buildings, tent cities, and people sitting, walking, doing nothing. It seems more impoverished than Nairobi [where we had been in August]. Brian also mentioned that they had passed the port and that it was pretty "beat up."

Pictures from Brian






Star Telegram Article

About Brian and Larry

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Brian's call with Stephanie

Just wanted to let you know that Brian called a little while ago and he and the rest of the group are doing fine. They are in Port-au-Prince, about a mile from the airport, staying at a gated private school (or what used to be a private school - it is now being used as a base for about 50 U.S. military and as a medical center, I think).

Brian said they slept alright last night. There were dogs barking and roosters crowing early in the morning, and then they felt the aftershock and decided to go ahead and get up. He said that food is just a little scarce, but it's ok.

There was plenty to be done at the medical center where they were in the Dominican Republic, but they felt that they ought to go toward the center of things and help people who had not yet received any aid. They felt safe traveling, even through Port-au-Prince, and they feel safe where they are now. As I was talking to him, they were being ushered into a building where a meal was being served.

Brian said the group dynamics are unbelievably fantastic. Everyone is getting along great.

Oh, backing up a bit, he said that they were given free food on their flights Monday. Lines were opened up for them to get through security, customs, etc. Everyone was being as helpful as possible and things went very smoothly.

They are excited about the news that at 6:00 am tomorrow a Ross Perot plane is expected to land and provide them with supplies they were able to specifically request. They asked for a lot of things, including a portable x-ray machine, and they have been told that 90% of their requests are being met. Jimmy Seibert (sp?), pastor of Antioch Community Church in Waco, is expected to be on the plane as well.

Two members of their group are assessing an orphanage where apparently about 30 children have died and other children are crawling/walking around. They will know more soon, but it seems that no aid has reached these children yet. Tomorrow they will go there to set up a food and water distribution point and to provide medical care. Brian's sense was that there are many, many people still in desperate need. Despite all the help that has arrived, many have not yet been reached.

That's all I can remember from the phone conversation. Thanks for remembering Brian, the team from Antioch, other rescue teams, and the Haitians in your prayers.

Stephanie

Needed Items

I received this from Heather with AMI. Not even sure where to begin on getting these items down there, but maybe someone does.

My Email: I3yrdman (at) gmail (dot) com

David Byrd

"I just got off the phone with the team and these are the medical supplies they need more of:

Hydrocodone tablets or liquid
Oxycodone tablets
Rocephin
Silvadene cream
Kerlix gauze
Saline IV fluids
IV morphine
IV ketamine and versed
2 ambu bags
Vaseline gauze
Fiberglass casting materials – casting plaster and wrap
Tylenol suppositories
Stretchers
Sleeping mats/pads

So, if you know someone going who will be connecting with our team and who could bring supplies, please let us know!
Thanks,
Heather"

Official Team Update AMI #2

Hey everyone,

I spoke with the team this morning and they are all OK. They were not close to the second earthquake that occurred this morning although they could feel it. They should be currently loaded up and headed into PAP where they will arrive midday. They are going to be working in an area (building/tent) that is half occupied by a US military group so hopefully they will be secure! They will set up a “hospital” and will continue to treat and care for as many as they are able to serve.
The team is all in good spirits and encouraged about all the favor they have been given thus far. God has connected them with the right people at the right times and they are really being able to make an impact.

Please keep praying!
Heather

New Update

We triaged, treated, and operated on innumerable Haitians yesterday. Helicopters now coming and going every 15 minutes. We hear there may be thousands more coming. While we wait for our bus, we are heading to a World Vision tent hospital.

Aftershock news

I texted Brian this morning when I read about the big aftershock in Haiti. It sounded bad from the news. Brian wrote back and said they felt it, but it was "light" where they were in Jimani and lasted about 10 seconds.

Brian said they may be moving into Port-au-Prince today. They have been invited to stay in a building half-occupied with US military. The military wants them to set up a triage clinic there. There are some issues getting into the capital, lots of aid streaming in and injured streaming out. They anticipate a long ride. I told him we would pray about that.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Official Team Update AMI

Hello friends and family,

I just heard from Justin Boland, one of the leaders of the team in Haiti . They arrived safely last night to the Dominican Republic and he said everyone is doing well and in good spirits. They worked for several hours today in the Good Samaritan Hospital in Jimani, DR treating puncture wounds, broken limbs, and performing some amputations. Tomorrow they are planning on all sticking together and heading in as a team to Haiti to continue serving the need. They have had great favor with the people there and have several options for how to proceed in Haiti .

I will be in touch again as soon as I hear more. Please continue to keep praying for our team there that they will be strong, healthy, and able to give beyond measure to the people.

For Him,
Heather

ami | regional manager africa & east asia

New Update

We are stationed at a makeshift hospital in Jimani. There are probably 100 medical personnel, and 500 or so injured Haitians. Helicopters coming and going with patients. Doctors and nurses from all over the world. At least 7 orthopedic surgeons, and we hear more are coming. The surgeons are pinning broken bones in the or. We are dressing wounds, placing chest tubes, fixating broken limbs, giving antibiotics, and pain medicine. Most communication is done with broken French and interpreters.

There is nowhere for these people to go. They have to sleep, eat, and take care of bodily functions with people lying all around them. They scream when we set their broken limbs. We are scrambling to discharge them to make room for the incoming injured.

Port-au-Prince, as we have been told, stinks. All efforts are aimed at evacuating as many as possible to areas all over this island. So we expect more to arrive tomorrow. The injured people are devastated emotionally, but they are appreciative, generally. So far there hasn't been any violence.

The team hasn't slept since we left DFW yesterday. It is 2:30 pm and we are driving back to World Vision headquarters to try to find a place to set up our tents. I'm sticking with beef jerkey and power bars for nourishment. There is plenty of bottled water. Prayers for ortho supplies have been answered. Thank you.

The best description of it all might be good juxtoposed against awfulness, nausea and sweetness together. Pray for replenishment of our physical and emotional tanks. Pray for our Lord's comfort for these people while their wounds and broken bones heal. Pray for the Haitians who have lost limbs and loved ones. Pray for the organizers of this medical treatment center.

News from Jimani

At 9:30 p.m. our time the crew landed in Santa Domingo.

A little after 6:00 this morning I received another text: In Jimani. It is beautiful, mountainous, green. Pleasant weather. It was a 6 hour drive from San Domingo. Lots of Haitians here with broken bones - in a small hospital, lying in the hallways, lots of pain. More coming from Port-au-Prince, we hear. We are headed to the larger hospital to assess. Biggest problem is lack of orthopedic supplies and pain meds. We are at World Vision headquarters, and will be working out of their hospital tent. But that tent hasn't gone up yet. No security issues so far. No sleep last night. But crew is in good spirits.