Global & Disaster Medicine

Archive for August, 2016

Dubai: A plane in flames and they all survived except for the death of 1 firefighter.


Emergency managers in Louisiana turned to the Red Cross when record floods swept the state in March, but many say they received little help.

ProPublica

Regional Directors Meeting 28 June 2016

Talking Points on American Red Cross

Concerns Continuity of Personnel- High turnover has caused confusion as to the proper Point of Contact for local Directors when attempting to contact ARC. This is an issue not only during disaster response but for planning purposes as well.

Communications with local Directors- Opening/closing shelters without notifying local OHSEP. Not returning telephone calls/emails.

Evacuation Support – Food, Snacks and Water for Parish Pick Up Points

Shelter Support – Lack of support in shelter management and wrap around services during recent shelter operations in St.John/Ouachita/Calcasieu Parishes

How does the ARC propose to support the Point to Point/Blended shelter operations that they are committed to which include the following: Natchitoches NSU-PE Majors Building 500 evacuees from St. Bernard West Carroll Lingo Center 450 evacuees from St. John Ouachita Marbles Recreation Center 465 evacuees from St. John Adler Recreation Center 496 evacuees from St.John Johnson Recreation Center 452 evacuees from St.John West Monroe Sports Complex 250 evacuees from Plaquemine Robinson Center 445 evacuees from Lafourche Benoit Center 576 evacuees from Lafourche Powell Street Community Center 452 evacuees from Lafourche. This totals a commitment to 9 facilities with a total number of 4,086 evacuees.

Note: ARC was committed to the Monroe Civic Center in Ouachita Parish for 3000 Terrebonne Parish evacuees. Because of the concern that the ARC could not provide support for this facility, shelter management has been contracted with the Oklahoma Shelter Team. The same is true of the facilities at Grambling State University for 1000 evacuees.

General Concern Statewide there is a serious concern among Parish OHSEP Directors as to whether the ARC is prepared to provide the disaster response services that they traditionally have delivered.

The Red Cross response:  

This past spring, the American Red Cross responded to devastating floods across Louisiana to help thousands of people in need, and we stand by that response. More than 1,100 Red Cross volunteers delivered vital humanitarian aid and critical relief services there over the course of 10 weeks. More than half of those volunteers are residents of the state and dedicated members of the community, and throughout this spring flooding event, were committed to alleviating the suffering of over 9,000 of their neighbors in 37 of the state’s 64 parishes.

You have asked us to comment on a handful of emails and quotes from four emergency managers and three residents out of the 37 parishes and the 9,000 Louisianans we served regarding a complicated response effort spanning more than half of Louisiana. Very simply, these emails and quotes are not representative of the Red Cross response in Louisiana.

Throughout the entire Louisiana relief operation, Red Cross volunteers – funded by the generosity of donors from across the country – helped parish governments, community partners, and flood survivors meet their disaster needs through the provision of 30 shelters, 29 mobile feeding vehicles, 12 relief item distribution sites, 5 feeding sites, and 4 mobile kitchens. Red Cross volunteers also disbursed emergency cash assistance to more than 8,000 Louisianans to assist with their immediate needs.

Every day, the Red Cross takes decisive and actionable steps with our partners across the country to improve operational readiness and relationships with emergency management officials and community leaders. We also engage in candid conversations about the capacity and capabilities of our organization to best serve disaster victims. The Red Cross, as a donor-funded, volunteer relief organization, remains committed and ready to always seek the best outcomes for the communities we proudly live in and serve.


World Breastfeeding Week: The first week of August

The deaths of 823,000 children and 20,000 mothers each year could be averted through scaling up optimal breastfeeding practices to nearly universal levels, along with economic savings of US$ 300 billion.

Breastfeeding is a key part of USAID’s nutrition programs and goal to end preventable child and maternal deaths. Breastmilk helps deliver powerful antibodies and can help prevent often deadly diarrhea and pneumonia in infants. It also provides nutrients that help children grow up strong and healthy.

The Lancet

2014 Breastfeeding Report Card


Breaking News: Three hundred passengers and crew escaped on Wednesday when an Emirates passenger jet arriving from India caught fire after a hard landing in Dubai


PAHO last week reported 1,708 new suspected or confirmed chikungunya cases, bringing the total in the Americas this year to 214,547.

CIDRAP

Chikungunya, el virus que encorva

 


Saudi MOH: ‘2 New Confirmed Corona Cases Recorded’

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Syrian Refugees: Humanitarian Crisis in the Turkish Camps

Refugees of the Syrian Civil War: Impact on Reemerging Infections, Health Services, and Biosecurity in Turkey
Mehmet Doganay and Hayati Demiraslan

Health Security, Vol. 14, No. 4, August 2016: 220-225.

“…..By March 2016, the United Nations reported that 13.5 million Syrians required humanitarian assistance, including 6.6 million internally displaced persons and more than 4.8 million refugees outside of Syria. Turkey is currently hosting the largest number of Syrian refugees—more than 2.7 million. A limited number of refugees are living in camps settled around the border, and others are spread throughout Turkey. This explosive and unexpected increase in the Syrian population in Turkey has had several negative impacts on health and social determinants. The overload of healthcare facilities has led to shortages in childhood immunization programs, drugs, and access to clean water and food supplies. According to Ministry of Health data, more than 7.5 million Syrians were examined at outpatient clinics, and 299,240 were hospitalized; most of those hospitalized were injured and wounded victims who require and have been occupying intensive care units. The refugees generally live in crowded and unsanitary conditions, which may lead to the spread of respiratory, skin, gastrointestinal, and genital system infections. Currently, measles, poliomyelitis, leishmaniasis, and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis are the reemerging infections being most frequently recorded. Multidrug-resistant gram-negative bacterial infections seem to be an increasing problem in gunshot or surgical wounds. Hepatitis A, malaria, and varicella have been seen with a high incidence among the refugees. There are many problems waiting to be resolved for health and living standards in Turkey…..”


Dr Abdel Aziz Bareeh, who works in Saraqeb: 2 barrels of chlorine gas were dropped on the town Monday. “We know it’s chlorine because we were hit by it in the past and we are familiar with its odor and symptoms….We have 28 confirmed cases, mostly women and children.”

BBC

CNN:  “….A photographer who took photos of the injured for the White Helmets said victims were suffering symptoms such as watering eyes, spasms, sweating, coughing and difficulty breathing…..”

Saraqeb is near the Turkish border between Latakia and Aleppo on the map.


Human rights groups accuse Australia of deliberately ignoring the alleged abuse of asylum seekers being held at a remote Pacific island detention facility

Washington Post

 


“… jihadists are calling for mayhem at the Olympics…”

NY Times

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Rio de Janeiro

“…..For weeks, the Islamic State has been translating its core propaganda into Portuguese and advertising that it needs Portuguese speakers, in what analysts fear is an attempt to recruit and create a network in Brazil to strike around the Olympics….”

 


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