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Evan Lyon, MD, an associate physician at the Division of Global Health Equity at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School, focuses on community-based approaches to HIV and TB treatment. Dr. Lyon, a longtime affiliate of Boston-based Partners in Health, has worked in Haiti since 1996, and recently spent several weeks there just after the earthquake hit. He argues that community health workers, or “accompagnateurs,” should play a key role in rebuilding the country:

Partners In Health (PIH) is not a disaster relief organization. But PIH’s deep roots in Haiti allowed PIH to respond more quickly to provide emergency medical care following the earthquake on January 12 than most disaster-relief organizations. Over the past twenty years, PIH has hired a Haitian staff of more than 4,000, built 12 hospitals and health centers in the Central Plateau and Lower Artibonite Valley, and cultivated a strong working relationship with the Haitian Ministry of Health (MOH).

When the earthquake struck most of our staff was at home, in Haiti. There was no delay or bottleneck getting doctors and nurses to where they were needed most – PIH staff poured into Port-au-Prince to get to work. In the days immediately following the quake, PIH was designated by the World Health Organization (WHO) to “accompany” the recovery of Hôpital Université de l’Etat Haiti (HUEH), the University General Hospital in Port-au-Prince. Standing shoulder to shoulder with our Haitian colleagues, we helped them coordinate the outpouring of international assistance to support their devastated hospital.

PIH dispelled rumors of “insecurity” allowing aid to flow more quickly from the U.N., U.S. military, and other international aid agencies. Also because our 12 facilities (all outside the capital) were largely undamaged by the earthquake, we had the capacity to quickly receive and care for the injured who managed to leave Port-au-Prince. Our facilities in Cange, Hinche, St. Marc, and elsewhere are still overflowing with earthquake related patients.

PIH’s work in Haiti is built around community health workers (CHW), a job in Haitian Creole known as an “accompagnateur.” Accompagnateurs have a deep understanding of the needs and challenges of their own communities and care for patients as if they were their own family members. The CHW model not only helps PIH quickly identify where the needs are and provide proper care, but it also gives community members a means to provide for their families, at a time when jobs and food and water are scarce.

Half of PIH’s employees are already CHWs, and in the wake of the earthquake, PIH has hired dozens more to work on mobile teams that are providing medical care and essential supplies in the tent cities across Port-au-Prince. By injecting resources directly into communities, PIH is helping boost local communities and reaching thousands of people in need.

There is a massive demographic shift and resettlement underway in Haiti, as well as a new generation of amputees — both populations who will be vulnerable for months, years to come. We collectively must accompany these victims through resettlement and rehabilitation. For the amputees, the ongoing medical care includes physical therapy so they can walk again; care for their skin as they are bed bound; help bringing food and water; make their beds, and emptying their bedpans.

We must use the same types of systems we have employed to create high quality and durable infrastructure for health in resettlement and ongoing rehabilitation efforts.

Why not use the CHW model to help care for the injured, homeless, and traumatized by the January 12 earthquake? By training and mobilizing CHWs to “accompany” the victims of the earthquake, we can care for the suffering, build infrastructure where it has been destroyed (or never existed in the first place), and immediately create thousands of jobs. By implementing proven programs, we can help change the future of Haiti.

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Comments
  • Glenna Smith posted:
    Comment posted March 6th, 2010 at 2:29 pm

    Thank you for getting the word out about PIH. The work that they have done in Haiti, Peru, Russia, etc. is astounding and I think it is important for the listening public to understand that they aren’t just another NGO with only one focus.

  • Jam Reyes posted:
    Comment posted March 28th, 2010 at 6:15 am

    i have several relatives who were also vicitimized by the earthquake in Haiti. thank God that they were not seriously hurt. i hope and pray that Haiti would be able to recover soon from this disaster.

  • Charly Lance posted:
    Comment posted April 15th, 2010 at 3:43 am

    Have anyone noticed that earthquake is a bit frequent these days? . Does climate change have any thing to do with earthquake?

  • Keean Trent posted:
    Comment posted April 21st, 2010 at 8:33 am

    some of my friends who work in haiti were also victimized by that terrible earthquake.- i was very thankful that they only suffered minor scratches.

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  • ninel conde posted:
    Comment posted July 5th, 2010 at 8:29 pm

    You can still help … Many organizations are launching calls to donate to Haiti.

    Please just google search on “Haiti help” and there you go

    They are very bad there today July 5, 2010

    Ninel

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