Saturday, March 19, 2011

The latest happenings




These CHE trainers are tying up buckets to be able to transport them back to their villages. We received a large donation of buckets, scrub brushes, and hand soap from IOM to distribute at oral rehydration posts.

Someone very close to me asked me tonight what I'm doing these days at work (thanks, Mom!). It turns out I've never mentioned that I'm no longer helping coordinate volunteers coming to work with cholera patients. Thankfully, the worst part of the crisis seems to be over. So, while we will continue to maintain oral rehydration posts in rural areas for the foreseeable future (so that people won't die of dehydration on their way to cholera treatment centers), we're mostly back to our former work of training in disease prevention, spiritual discipleship, and development.

I am still involved in trip planning:
  • A group from southern Haiti will be coming to see some of our CHE villages in the northeast in April, as they consider whether to be trained to use the CHE tools themselves. I'm really looking forward to this trip since I haven't been to this area before and it's where some of our strongest programs are.
  • Marcelo Lopez, an Argentine accountant and economics professor, will be coming in May to give a microenterprise training to our trainers. He comes once or twice a year with different materials. I've been coordinating his trip in part because I'll be his interpreter while he's here.

  • A church in Detroit will be sending teams to make badges for our trainers, committee members, and community health evangelists. We are so excited about this! Almost everyone who works with us is a volunteer and doesn't receive renumeration. A badge is something they've been asking for for a really long time.

Speaking of “encouragements” for our volunteers: we've ordered t-shirts! Over five hundred volunteers have been working so tirelessly for months with the cholera epidemic, and before that they were teaching their neighbors about physical, spiritual, and emotional health in their spare time. We received funds a few months ago to buy everyone a “Medical Ambassadors Haiti” t-shirt! So, one of my jobs was to aid communication between my Haitian and Dominican colleagues during the ordering process (they don't make t-shirts here). And the upside is, I learned how to say “polo shirt” in Kreyol and Dominican Spanish. (It's actually not that exciting, it's essentially “with collar” in both languages.)

Nurse Marie Junie and my colleague Osse stand by a rented truck ready (as soon as the tarp's put on) to take donated cholera supplies to a hospital in the west. In addition to buckets, soap, and brushes, IOM also donated this hospital several boxes of IV solution and sprayers. A big shout out to Marie Junie: she left her house before 5 am to get to our office, and then had car trouble returning over the mountains and didn't get to the hospital until 5:30 pm.