A boy injured during last week's earthquake lies on a bed
at a hospital in Port-au-Prince, Monday, January 18, 2010.
Photo by AP.
Doctors skirted a bureaucratic logjam to save the life of
three critically ill child victims of Haiti's earthquake on
Sunday, flying them to US hospitals on a private jet to avoid a
military suspension of medical evacuation flights.
A 5-year-old tetanus victim, a 14-month-old boy critically ill
with pneumonia and a baby with third-degree burns were sent to
Children's Hospital in Philadelphia by the aid group Partners
in Health, based in Boston.
The airlift had been in doubt after the US military stopped
medical evacuation flights on Wednesday night because of
because of an apparent dispute over where seriously injured
patients should be taken for treatment.
"This is a good day. These are three children who would have
died if they had stayed here," said Luis Ivers, Partners in
Health's clinical director in Haiti. "It's the little
successes like that that keep us going here."
Five-year-old Betina Joseph, who developed tetanus from a
small cut on her thigh, was in danger of dying if she could
not reach a respirator at a US hospital, said Dr. Barth
Green, chairman of the University of Miami's Global Institute
for Community Health and Development.
"We have 100 critically ill patients who will die in the next
day or two if we don't Medevac them," Green said Friday.
Meanwhile, the UN's World Food Program began distributing
food directly to women on Sunday, largely avoiding the
violent jostling that has disrupted aid since the earthquake.
The UN and partners handed out 25kg bags of rice at 14 sites
and plan to continue the system daily for the next two weeks.
Also getting aid were elderly and disabled people and some
men, who were allowed into line if women in their household
were unable to come.
Young men often have forced their way to the front of aid
delivery lines or steal from it from others, meaning aid
doesn't reach the neediest at rough-and-tumble distribution
centers, according to aid groups. UN officials say they are
still far short of reaching all 2 million quake victims
estimated to need food aid.
Both federal and state officials appeared to distance
themselves from the decision to suspend the military's
medical evacuation flights.
White House officials said they were working to increase
hospital capacity in Haiti and aboard the USNS Comfort
hospital ship as well as in the United States. Col. Rick
Kaiser said Sunday that the US Army Corps of Engineers has
been asked to build a 250-bed tent hospital to relieve
pressures on the Comfort and on Haitian facilities where
earthquake victims are being treated under tarpaulins in
hospital grounds.
Several Port-au-Prince hospitals were damaged or destroyed in
the January 12 earthquake. US Ambassador to Haiti Kenneth
Merten said about 435 earthquake victims had been evacuated
before the suspension, and that he was "sure the Department
of Defense wants to do the right thing."
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist told ABC News' Good Morning
America on Sunday he was puzzled by the reported suspension.
He said 700 people had come from Haiti to Florida over the
past 24 hours and said the state was still willing to help
emergency cases.
"It's all hands on deck here in the Sunshine State. We're
welcoming Haitians with open arms and probably done more than
any other state and happy to continue to do so," Crist said.
In other developments: - Ten Americans were detained by
Haitian police on Saturday as they tried to bus 33 children
across the border into the Dominican Republic, allegedly
without proper documents.
The Baptist church members from Idaho called it a "Haitian
Orphan Rescue Mission" to save abandoned children in the
disaster zone. But the Americans - the first known to be
detained since the earthquake - put themselves in the middle
of a political firestorm over fears that children are falling
prey to child trafficking. A Monday hearing before a judge
was scheduled.
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