This is a blog for anyone interested in telling others of their time in Haiti. It's meant more for us to share stories, and please make any comments you'd like in the box below the posts (no need to sign in). Contact Julian if you would like to post on the blog--we welcome anyone doing health-related work in northern Haiti.

While we welcome discussion on this blog, issues meant for feedback from the Network should be posted on the discussion board by emailing caphealth@yahoogroups.com

Thursday, December 6, 2012

March 2012 Vasectomy Mission


While NSVI would never have developed a program in Haiti were it not for the tireless efforts of Dr. Fritz Lolagne (Haiti's undisputed leader in long-term methods of family planning), NSVI owes much of its success in North Haiti to Pastor Amos Myrtil whose charity work and good reputation in Plaisance/Pilate have made him a voice that people can trust. So we return to Plaisance for a 3rd time. Through Dr. Ted Kaplan of the Cap Haitien Health Network, we learned that Dr. Maudelin Mesadieu and his clinic staff in Ft. Bourgeois are strong supporters of family planning eager to introduce vasectomy to their service area. We also had a feeling that Limbe, the site of Amos's alma mater and conveniently located between Cap Haitien and Plaisance, might be a good third site. We did not expect that we would be fortunate enough find another enthusiastic supporter (Dr. Emmanuel Mareus) running the health clinic in Limbe.
Logistics contributes to the efficiency and effectiveness of a mission. Cap-Haitien is closer to Plaisance than is Port-Au-Prince and its airport receives non-stop flights from the very easy Ft. Lauderdale Airport (FLL). An overnight stay near FLL (Stein can fly from Tampa and Suarez can drive from Naples) to catch the 06:30 non-stop to CAP allows for an early arrival and a full day of vasectomies. But the airport runways are too short for jets and there is only one carrier (IBC Airways). The flights are infrequent (only 4 per week), expensive ($300-350), and often sold out months in advance. But for our work, it is still better than driving or flying to North Haiti from Port-Au-Prince.
Ft. Bourgeois is only minutes from CAP and Limbe is on the way to Plaisance. The map on the right is a blowup on the white rectangle in the left map.

Fort Bourgeois

The Health Center at Fort Bourgeois is on the main road, so the banner announcing our offer of free vasectomies (hung a week before our arrival) was easily seen (when the wind wasn't blowing).
Men were waiting when we arrived and the Medical Director of the clinic, Dr. Mesadieu, explained vasectomy in detail with Drs. Suarez and Stein standing by to fill in details about recovery time, risks and benefits, sexual function, vasectomy reversal, etc.
The doorway behind Dr. M led to the procedure room, and the NSVI team set to work on the first patients as Dr. Mesadieu's staff counseled later arrivals.
The procedure room had natural light, plenty of space, and two tables.
Dr. Lolagne showed Dr. Mesadieu the technique, but NSVI has learned that quick procedures in the hands of experienced vasectomists do more to enhance the local acceptance of vasectomy than prolonged procedures performed while training. NSVI feels more comfortable with "hands-on" training of local doctors when vasectomy becomes popular in a community.
Dr. Suarez shows Dr. Mesadieu his own style, while Dr. Lolagne chats with the patient.
Dr. Mesadieu is impressed that the patient feels nothing after no-needle anesthesia is administered.
Dr. Mesadieu and his staff pose with the NSVI Team after an afternoon of 11 vasectomies. Those 11 patients had fathered 83 children. How will they ever find jobs? If NSVI can return periodically to Ft. Bourgeois, that average number of offspring will hopefully decrease.
While Dr. Lolagne and Lisette spent the night with friends in Cap Haitien, Ramon, Doug, Amos, and Juline stayed at the guest house of Madame Bell in Voudreuil. Next morning we visited Limbe, first the Universite Chretienne du Nord D'Haiti (originally the SĂ©minaire Baptiste du LimbĂ©), Pastor Myrtil's alma mater.

LIMBE

We were lucky enough to encounter an English Professor …
… who escorted us to the Health Center up the side road just beyond the university.
The medical staff had not yet arrived, but a caretaker showed us the clinic.
Nothing fancy …
… but plenty of well-lit space. Perhaps next time, as we were committed to work in Plaisance on this day.
Plaisance is in the highlands to the southwest.
Even in the countryside, one can be impressed with the crowds of people and the difficult living and transport conditions.

PLAISANCE

On arrival at the Plaisance school which worked well as a vasectomy site during our last mission, the headmaster suggested that we use the rooms downstairs. It was a great suggestion. There was less noise, and two spacious rooms. Just inside the doorway through that pink wall …
… was a nice coral-colored area where patients could wait …
… have their vitals checked, fill out registration forms, and receive counseling from Juline.
Behind that room was a procedure room with good light and enough room for two tables.
We had bought two portable massage tables on Amazon for under $100 apiece, and they worked GREAT! Strong, comfortable, and easy to clean.
The local kids had a great time trying sneak a peak at the exciting surgery. The patients did not seem to mind.
Dr. Lolagne would call out and give them hell in Creole periodically,
but they were so cute and having so much fun that it was hard to get angry.
But they took posing with us during a mid-day break very seriously.
In the afternoon, Dr. Emmanuel Mareus ("Dr. Manno") arrived from Limbe with 5 patients. He did their counseling …
while the giggling kids dared each other to overstep the threshold of our makeshift clinic.
Dr. Suarez was delighted to teach when Dr. Manno became an eager student.
Juline did a great job maintaining records,
and Dr. Lolagne signed off on every one. Juline was "on loan" from Dr. Ted Kaplan's Cap Haitien Health Network, and NSVI is very grateful to Dr. Kaplan and Juline for partnering with us in Haiti. While NSVI provides the framework and equipment, and covers the expenses of our missions in Haiti, the host organization is Dr. Lolagne's own
"National Center for Surgical Contraception"
The more Juline knows about the process, the better she will be able to counsel men during future missions.
Dr. Lolagne shares a laugh with a couple of happy (relieved that it was easier than expected) patients.
Any more patients? Send them this way.
How could any man with enough children resist that friendly face?
That final group shot with the patients brought by Dr. Manno from Limbe. We had performed vasectomies on 25 men who had fathered a total of 123 children.
Night falls early in Haiti, which chooses to be in the Central Time Zone despite being 300 miles EAST of Florida. There is no public electricity in Plaisance. This is a rare solar-powered streetlight. When there is no moon, Plaisance gives a whole new meaning to darkness. Ramon poses under the only glow for miles.
NSVI can only hope that the men we have served will spread the word about vasectomy, so that others can see the light of nurturing fewer children more effectively so that those children can get the education they need to transform Haiti from a land of poverty and joblessness to a paradise of economic and cultural success.
from http://www.nsvi.org/where-we-work/haiti/haiti-mission-2012-march/


Saturday, November 10, 2012

The wear house flooded








Today made it 3 days of heavy rain,thunder and lighting, due to that many houses were flooded including the wear house. According to the local people and news forecast there had many deaths, poeple are homeless.  Covsky had rent a water pump to take out about 2ft the water out of the wear house. Most of the medication were damage and ruin. There has been a few cholera out brakes in Cap-Haitien. Please keep Haiti in your thoughts and prayers today as we struggle with heavy rain.

Saturday, October 27, 2012

New DASH Hospital

Thanks to FON (Friend of the Network) Hans Schutt, I learned more about the new hospital that has opened in Cap, and he recommended I see it, so I did on Saturday Oct. 20.  Hans explained that it primarily is based on an employer paid health plan, with small deductables for employees or their families to get care.  They also offer services for fee for service, and are open 24-7.

On the way there, I met former Network Support Team intern and Network interpreter Jean Brunel Louis, and we went together to the facility just past the cathedral on the main square at 17K called DASH.  It is a 4 story light green (color of healthcare) building still receiving some finishing touches.  We were welcomed by Bertholot Laroche, part of the administration, who took us on a tour.  They have a beautiful waiting room, clinic area, lab, pharmacy, OR, delivery area, and inpatient rooms are upstairs, including a large private room with a view of the town square.

I also had the chance to speak by phone with the founder, Dr. Ronald Laroche.  He tells me they have 6 of such centers in Port-au-Prince, and that they are a nonprofit.  We discussed many ways that we might work together, including a place to receive referrals from clinics and teams for x-rays, labs, and admissions, and we started the process of having the DASH Hospital join the Cap Haitien Health Network.  We welcome them and thank them for bringing such a modern and well organized facility to Cap Haitien!!