Monday, January 18, 2010

AT LAST - Fully Engineered Portable Trauma/Surgical Center











It started as a discussion topic on Tuesday evening, January 12, following the Haiti earthquake after seeing the pile of rubble that was once the National Hospital in Port Au Prince . Nobody initially took us seriously, but the members of The Humanitarian Network, when put to the task, can accomplish most things. The vision of a portable MASH-style facility was too big a task and there was no way to accomplish such a project over night. But then again, nobody realized the gravity of the situation in Haiti, that it would go rapidly downhill starting Wednesday morning, or that the Network Partners have the resources and drive to get projects done.
In just three days working with Network Partners World Shelters, Project Hope International, MSNI, IMECA, and others, we have engineered a facility that can be erected in-the-field, in a day’s time, by basic unskilled labor and supervisory help from The Network. It can be completely equiped with diagnostic equipment, operating suites, triage/exam room, pharmaceutical storage (refrigerated as well); outfitted with a purified water and air system, 110 and 220 electrical system, air conditioning and able to withstand class 1 or 2 hurricane winds, at a price that is easily affordable. The variable in the cost would be attributed to the inclusionary equipment required including portable x-ray, ultrasound, and other high tech requirements.
For the units designed for Haiti, we even have an accompaniment of manual hospital beds exceeding 60 at this stage, though many may have to be situated in an adjacent structure or tent. This is feasible because the weather in very hospitable.The Transition Emergency Trauma/Surgical Center is an ideal project for a Service Club District, NGO, government agency, or any concerned group of individuals, including cities with Sister-City relationships. It is the ideal facility for any disaster related event or to handle normal hospital overflow in cases of man-made disaster or use for national/state emergencies.

Specifications

· Staffing, equipment and supplies by Project HOPE
· 3000 ft2 total enclosed space
· Separate rooms for surgical procedures
· Cots/”ward beds” for 30 - 50 patients
· Adequate lighting for different purposes
· Air conditioning and ventilation
· Refrigeration
· Adequate power 120% of anticipated max load: 80% solar, 40% generator
· 3,000 ft2 Enclosures for Trauma Center, Surgery Suite and Patient Care
· Two each 44 ft diameter domes with enclosed rooms inside the shells
· Galvanized steel frame
· Assemble by hand – no special equipment required
· Fire-retardant and UV-resistant cover
· White “Tropical Plus” vinyl
· Windows Overlap fabric doors
· Two - Five (or more, as specified), enclosed rooms
· Hard-panel frameless enclosed rooms
· Options include 110 ft2, or 200 ft2
· Price includes 3 ea 110 ft2, 2 ea 200 ft2
· High-efficency LED lighting, appropriate for the purpose of each space
· Air Conditioning for both 44 ft2 domes
· Vent fans, self-contained solar powered
· Adequate electricity for all lighting and air conditioning
· 80% of capacity from solar electric system
· Solar panels, gel batteries, invertors, control boxes, wiring
· Additional 40% of capacity (i.e. 120% of load total) provided by quiet generators
· fuel to be specified (propane, gas, diesel)
· Refrigerator 12v DC 15 ft3 ultra-high efficiency for vaccines and similar items
· Extra-cold refrigerator 12vDC 10 ft3 ultra-high efficiency for blood and serum
· TOTAL PRICE FOB ORIGIN: $167,000 + $10,000 Water Filtration System
· Funding Programs AvailibleTo view “fly-through” movie (.wmv), will be available soon

For Information on How to Participate in this Program, contact Project Hope International, World Shelters, or simply call: 877-532-2919

Latest News on Haiti - Sunday Morning

Gen. Keen, SOUTHCOM, just issued a release regarding logistics and incoming flight coordination and bottlenecks at airports, using all assets within Haiti. This includes the airport at Cap Haitien where Gen Keen is now situated. They must clear transit routes from Cap Haitien to Port Au Prince.

This is why our flights from Air Haiti were diverted temporarily I guess. There's a Naval Admiral now working with General Keen to see what they can do to get the Ports open, but this will not be an overnight occurance.

The Port Au Prince facility was totally destroyed and under water wreckage has to be dealt with.There are 10,000 US military personnel which will be Haiti by this afternoonJust in from Medshare: Nathan Carmack reports we have found an air routing to Pignon and other airstrips like Jacmal. We are referring all trafficing info to George Lee who is the Loadmaster of operation "Air Haiti". This info will be shared with Dr. Ali Tahari and Peter Deputy to pass along.A Fuel Fund for humanitarian flights will be established on Tuesday (Monday in a US bank holiday). We will request donations.

Rotarian Dennis Chong has arranged for refueling in Jamaica for general aviation pilots and other to refuel after dropping loads in Haiti. Once established, we will arrage for drafting the flight funds for refueling needs with Dennis.

We all need to spread the word that we need to build this fund as quickly as possible so cargo flight can be assured of funding for their fuel needs. See:http://www.helphaitirecover.org/and look for Fuel Flight Donations Button to contribute. Project Support Partners LLC has been asked to set-up a club fund raising program so clubs and other organizzations can raise money to finance this program. More on that shortly.

Posted by Rotarian, Ed Mattson at 7:07 AM 0 comments

"Air Haiti" Bulletin


"Air Haiti" BulletinJust received word that one of the flights into Haiti was told they couldn't land. Looks as if SOUTHCOM has taken over all fight scheduling into all areas of Haiti. This is something our LoadMaster, George, is dealing with. He has great report with SOUTHCOM and will gain our objectives, but today and tomorrow will be "no fly" days (we have one plane spending the day in some out-of-way, pissant-airport waiting to complete it's mission...and it has medical suppliers on board)


From here on out, we need to have known-clearance when a plane leaves, that we can land. Priority ITEMS ONLY as deemed by SOUTHCOM and UN/USAID. They include:WaterMedicineFoodThere is no fuel available anywhere in Haiti, All planes must carry enough fuel to make their return trip. There may be no fuel in Dom Rep shortly for General Aviation aircraft,; only commercial traffic.


There could be refueling in Bahamas, Jamaica, Puerto Rico according to Rtn. Dennis Chong. With out having sea lane available, this looks to be the standard operating procedures for the near future. We will continue to keep everyone in The Loop, and notify you if things change.We will have private planes and pilots hopefully available to fly-in waterboxes and small quantities of medical supplies (twin engine aircraft, i.e. Cessna 310, has a range of about 1000 miles and carry about 1000 lbs, so they would have to refuel in Dom Rep, Jamaica, Puerto Rico or Bahamas before returning to The States).


More and latest posting please check in at http://www.helphaitirecover.org/

Network Partner Plan USA - Haiti Program


Plan USA's earthquake response: phase 1 and phase 2 activities:


Plan is responding immediately, starting with providing water, food, and hygiene materials to those in the various makeshift internally displaced persons camps in the Port-au-Prince and Jacmel areas. Plan will also be responding in the seven field office areas in the earthquake zone, including Jacmel’s surrounding areas, Cayes-Jacmel and Croix-des-Bouquets, which are severely affected. Communications have now been partially re-established, and all 143 Plan staff are safe (although one is hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries) and all staff have been assigned to earthquake response.


Additionally, Plan is sending disaster management experts in child protection, earthquake response, water sanitation and hygiene (WASH), logistics, communications, ICT in emergencies, and other support staff from Plan Dominican Republic, the regional office in Panama and International Headquarters in the UK.Plan is working closely with government, emergency services and other organizations to respond to the immediate needs of children in the region and to assess the situation. During previous emergencies such as the hurricanes of 2008, Plan field offices have begun response immediately in the first 24 hours, even before outside help arrived and before communications were re-established.


Plan Dominican Republic is acting as a hub for these operations and will coordinate all the logistics, including transportation between Dominican Republic and Haiti.Plan’s priorities are to work across the affected areas to provide immediate and longer term relief, and also to ensure the rights of children are protected during this response. A Rapid Needs Assessment is currently being undertaken to ensure that Plan’s long term response is effective, efficient and targets the most vulnerable.


Phase 1, the Emergency Phase: In the first 90 days the focus is on:· Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH),· Temporary shelter and non-food items (including kitchen utensils, soap, etc),· Food,· Medical supplies and health services; and· Child protection.


Phase 2, the Recovery Phase: During months 3 to 12 and beyond, the focus is on:· Recovery WASH activities, such as repair of water systems,· Rebuilding shelter,· Child protection and psychosocial support,· Education in emergencies;· Child-focused emergency education and Disaster Risk Reduction, and· Potential rehabilitation, reconstruction and equipping of buildings like schools and hospitals.

From MedShare International-Transportation to Haiti

Haiti
Flag this messageRE: ContactFriday, January 15, 2010 2:12 PM
From:"Josh Kravitz" Add sender to Contacts
To:"Robert Ketron" Cc:"R-M LC Dr Leigh Readdy" , "ed mattson" , "Neil Young" , "7620 DG09 Paul Frey"
Hey Rob,

This is promising! We will have 20 4x4 pallets that are normally built 7 feet tall, but that can be adjusted.How much does it does to fuel a DC3?-

JoshJosh Kravitz
Programs DirectorMedShare
3240 Clifton Springs Road
Decatur, GA 30034770-323-5858 x203
www.medshare.org

ADDRESSING MEDICAL RELIEF IN HAITI

Many thanks for the follow-up. We just posted it on http://www.therotarianworld.blogspot.com/ and will post this afternoon on http://www.helphaitirecover.org/ and http://www.helphaitirecover.org/HOWTOHELPFUNDING.htm.
We have several state disaster agencies who have been in contact with us regarding goods they want to send in. Good to know you can handle it.We also have a major Humanitarian Network Partner who is putting together a Transitional Building (see: http://www.worldshelters.com/) so Project Hope International, another of our startegic partners, will have a clean facility to perform major surjuries. Project Hope has several medical teams in country now, with much needed medical supplies and medicine.We have several medical warehouses which can send medical supplies as a back-up to replace the local doctors who have run out, and replenish Project Hope.

By copy herewith, I am asking for Jack Maxwell and Larry Biron, to send me a list of what we can send from MSNI, how much we need to raise, and we'll post that as a high priority project on The Netwrok. This and another load of Waterboxes will be a high priority on Air Haiti. We will have cost figures for the Hospital Trauma Building shortly and hope Rotarians will step up and help fund it. We could have it there in a day or so, but need Rotarian manpower to erect it over in Port au Prince.

More again shortly....many thanksRTN. Ed Mattson PHF (Cell: 630.440.7912)

Dominican Republic - Haiti Relief











From: Charles F. Adams Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 5:17 PMTo: John Eberhard (eberhard@uwo.ca)Cc: Barry Rassin (barry@rassin.org); Dick McCombe (rmccombe@gussiemae.org); 'Ramiro Melo'; 'claude surena'; Alexandra Martinez Adams (doctoralexandra@gmail.com)Subject: DR Haiti Disaster Relief CommitteeImportance: HighTo: Mr. John EberhardExecutive Director, CRCID, and Chair,Disaster Relief – Rotarian Action GroupPhone: 519-473-2100Fax: 519-471-8982Web: http://www.drrag.org/From: Charles F. AdamsInternational CoordinatorHaiti Disaster Relief CommitteeDistrict 4060, Dominican RepublicU.S. phone to the DR: 518-685-4285DR cell phone: 829-509-5505 or 809-753-5505Electronic Fax (U.S.): 518-338-0124Re: Credentials of the DR Haiti Disaster Relief CommitteeDear John:

On behalf of 4060 DG Ramiro Sanchez and all the members of our Haiti Disaster Relief Committee,

I am pleased to convey the background information and documentation about our committee that you requested in our phone conversation, this morning.District 4060 is not just motivated by its commitment to “Service Above Self” with respect to the tragedy of Haiti, its island neighbor. After all, we know all too well what tragedy is after the devastating hurricanes we experience, ourselves. But the Dominican Republic, by accident of geography, is also uniquely situated to be an effective route for delivering emergency goods and services to Haiti. In fact, for many things, the DR may be the least expensive and fastest way to acquire and ship materials and supplies into Haiti.

What Haiti needs the most is not available in Haiti – at any price. One cannot buy food when there is no food, nor medicines when there are none. But most of what is needed is available in the Dominican Republic, and the Dominican government is firmly committed to facilitating aid initiatives to Haiti. Accordingly, the DR’s 64 Rotary Clubs believe that we can play a useful role by creating an effective supply chain of emergency goods from the DR to Haiti.

Our Haiti Disaster Relief Committee, therefore, has two initiatives. One is to marshal the contributions of goods from our own 64 Rotary Clubs for delivery to Haiti. DG Ramiro has already published that request, and individual clubs have already begun collecting needed supplies. The second is to solicit the support of the international Rotary community.

Many foreign Rotary clubs and districts do not know how to work directly with the Rotary clubs in Haiti – and it is not always easy to do so, even under the best of circumstances. However, we know the Haitian Rotarians well. For the past three years while managing the national campaign “Pure Water for Haiti,” for example, the Petion-Ville club was my “home” club. Dr. Claude Surena, a dear friend of mine and with whom you’ve spoken by phone, is an eminent member of that club as well as being the president of the Haitian Medical Association. Dr. Surena has agreed to manage the storage and distribution of supplies sent from the DR to Haiti by our committee.DG Ramiro has named the following Rotarians to the Haiti Disaster Relief Committee;Ramiro Sanchez,
DG 09-10. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=ferreteriamelo1@gmail.com Phone: 809-399-0978 (in Spanish)Aura Baslis, DG 10-11. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=auribasilis@yahoo.comJacqueline Medina, DG 11-12. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=emilce@codetel.net.doAlexandra Martinez de Adams, DG 12-13. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=doctoralexandra@gmail.comJose Augusto Mella, PDG 06-07 and District Secretary 09-10. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=jmella@codetel.net.doJose Ma [Zhema] Fernandez, AG 09-10, Webmaster and PR. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=zhema.jmfm@gmail.comAmbiorix de la Cruz, P 09-010, Santo Domingo Naco. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=ambiorix.delacruz@francoacra.comMarilis Perez, PP, Santo Domingo Colonial. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=marilisp@hotmail.comRuben Goico Rodriguez, National Coordinator of the Committee. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=rubengoico@yahoo.comCharles F. Adams, International Coordinator of the Committee. Email: http://us.mc507.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=charles@taeria.com

To facilitate the receipt and disbursements of funds by bank wire, DG Ramiro has set up a dedicated bank account at Banco BHD. (Please contact DG Ramiro directly for instructions)We know that individuals and small clubs or organizations are often not acquainted with using bank wires -- or it is just not economic for them to do so. Therefore, to facilitate the handling of smaller contributions by check or money order in the U.S. and Canada, Safe Water Institute, Inc., a 509(c)(3) in Grand Rapids, MI (which is also officially registered to do business in the DR) has agreed to serve as the agent for the Haiti Disaster Relief Committee. Safe Water Institute will accept checks, money orders, or cash on behalf of the Haiti Disaster Relief Committee and convey those funds immediately to our committee in the DR.Checks or money orders should be made out to Safe Water Institute, Inc. and sent to:Safe Water Institute, Inc.Attn: Harry J. Knopke, CEOP.O. Box 68007Grand Rapids, MI 49516Phone: 616-774-8017Cell: 616-540-4094

I will also attach a letter ( as you requested) from DG Ramiro which authorizes me to solicit funds for our committee.Finally, I know you by reputation, of course; however, we have never met. Accordingly, I will attach some background information for your “due diligence” file.It would be an honor if District 4060 Rotarians could make it possible for other clubs, districts, foundations, and aid agencies in the U.S. and elsewhere to come to the rescue of people in Haiti who are suffering and dying. And time is of the essence. If you feel that this would be a productive way for other Rotarians to help, kindly feel free to tell other districts and clubs about our committee and our willingness to be of service.

The Future of Haiti Is In Our Hands.CharlesCharles F. AdamsDom.Rep. Home: 809-226-8565Dom.Rep. Cell: 829-509-5505 or 809-753-5505U.S. Line to Dom.Rep.: 518-685-4285Electronic Fax: 518-338-0124