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HAITI-HOSPITAL Mar-11-2010 (620 words) With photos posted March 2 and 3. xxxi

Relief partners plan to move Haitian Catholic hospital to new location


A man assists a woman in a wheelchair at St. Francis de Sales Hospital in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in early March, seven weeks after the massive earthquake that left more than 200,000 dead and the capital in ruins. (CNS/George M. Martell, The Catholic Foundation)

By Tom Tracy
Catholic News Service

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (CNS) -- The blue armband around Benia Celestin's wrist bears her name and the number 1, indicating she was the first trauma patient admitted to what was left of St. Francis de Sales Hospital following the Jan. 12 earthquake.

Celestin remains in a bed under a temporary tarp in the hospital's courtyard near the center of the Haitian capital. A brace holds together her fractured hip.

"I fell through the second floor of my building while standing in front of a TV set when the earthquake struck," she told doctors from the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center who were visiting the hospital in early March as part of special delegation teamed with Catholic Relief Services.

The medical teams include 20 surgeons and other health care workers who rotate in and out of Haiti weekly. CRS manages peripheral aspects of their work including management of drug supplies, laboratory needs, finance and compliance and working with community health workers.

One member of the team, Dr. Robert Redfield, said Celestin needs follow up treatment involving equipment not normally available in the poverty-wracked country. Her recovery will be hastened if she is moved to a better-equipped location, he said.

About 80 percent of the hospital was destroyed in the earthquake. Despite the destruction, the hospital remains one of the primary treatment centers for patients with trauma and chronic illnesses. Doctors from around the world have treated patients since the earthquake under primitive conditions in tents and under tarps and plastic sheeting hung from trees.

Because of the hospital's importance to Haiti's health care network, plans are underway to relocate it to a safer location so patients can continue their treatment.

With donations and grant money from an existing partnership between CRS and the Maryland trauma center, the hospital will move in April to the grounds of the Archdiocese of Port- au -Prince's Our Lady of Cazeau Seminary near the international airport. The move will allow for the demolition and rebuilding of the existing St. Francis de Sales Hospital.

CRS is setting up what amounts to a field hospital, with surgical and rehabilitation rooms and a wide array of emergency equipment.

The decision to relocate the hospital was based partly on the fact that the neighborhood where people were being discharged was virtually destroyed, leaving them with no place safe to go, said Karen Moul, communications officer for CRS. The medical staff was concerned that discharged patients were returning to unsafe and unsanitary tent cities that could hasten the onset of infection and other complications.

"We would like to keep them longer but there are more patients coming in that we need to see," Moul said.

In addition to treating earthquake victims, the hospital was one of Haiti's leading centers for AIDS prevention and care. The move will allow those services to resume.

Prior to the earthquake, CRS Haiti had received a $6 million grant from the U.S. government to partner with the University of Maryland for AIDS prevention and care for about 3,000 people. The grant was targeted to create a "center of excellence" in HIV care at St. Francis de Sales.

Moul expressed concern that the disruption in care caused by the earthquake will promote the spread of a more deadly form of HIV as patients miss their treatments, leading to a drug-resistant form of the virus.

"Without care, (patients) will be subject to other opportunistic infections," Moul said. "There are second-line medications which are expensive and difficult to find in developing countries so we want to keep them in the first-line medications."

"If we could keep everybody engaged in their medication it would be better, especially as people are really moving around a lot," she said.

END


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