
Normally I write to you, as a pediatrician and a mom about products that make me feel compelled to recommend. And yes, more are coming. But since January 12th I have been focused almost entirely on Haiti and hope you will not forget the disaster there. So I would like to humbly recommend some places to spend your money that are not consumer oriented- at least for this month- while knowing how hard it is to feel connected to a disaster so far away.
Thanks to generous donors to Mobile Pediatric.org (www.mobilepediatric.org), we have raised significant funds for Haitian children that will be passed on to existing charities there based on the quality of care, the commitment to care and the dedication to charitable work that these charities provide. As the director of Mobile Pediatric, my commitment is not only to children’s health and wellbeing but also to insuring that your generous support gets delivered to the best possible charitable organizations that you, as donors, have expressed an interest in supporting. I hope that you will be very pleased with how your generosity is being utilized. AS of now, our donations are going to two locations that Dr Geary has worked in:
1. Mary’s Meals is helping victims of the Haiti earthquake in: Cite Soleil, a notorious slum outside Port au Prince and in schools and an orphanage in the country’s central region. ? Mary’s Meals has been working in Haiti since 2006 and, at the time of the earthquake, was providing over 12,000 children with a daily meal in school. Over 6,000 of the children lived in the Cite Soleil slum.
Mary’s meals is now making regular deliveries of clean water to the people of Cite Soleil, assessing the damage to the 8 school campuses in Cite Soleil where we provide Mary’s Meals, employing local people to salvage re-usable material and repair the schools’ perimeter walls, providing food, clothing and hygiene kits for 2,000 families who have taken in people who fled to Hinche from Port au Prince, helping 500 displaced people in Hinche relocate to their home town, delivered $30,000 of urgently needed medical supplies to Hinche hospital?
Ongoing plans include
-Resume feeding the children in Cite Soleil as soon as we have a secure base?- Restart lessons as soon as possible in temporary classrooms?- Repair, rebuild schools once we have properly assessed extent of the damage
2. National Organization for the Advancement of Haitians (NOAH NY) NOAH NY is providing emergency support at Bojeux in Tabarre (located near downtown Port au Prince across from the U.S. Ambassy), where they have already established a field hospital. A contingent of volunteer doctors from around the states has been instrumental in administering urgent medical care to hundreds of severely injured children and adults. The continued relief missions will be made possible by the funds received from donations. The funds will be used to purchase desperately needed medical equipment, medical supplies, medicine and transportation for the injured.




Despite generous shipments of donated medical supplies from the USA to this group of approx 10 medical professionals staffing the site round the clock,( rotating teams coming in for ten day commitments) many of the supplies had not been transported from the airport when we arrived. Fortunately, a Haitian volunteer helped us to get the supplies slowly but consistently to the camp hospital. In fact one of the largest single logistical problems was NOT a shortage of medical volunteers willing to help, but instead the distribution of supplies and transportation. The transport issues are not just about getting the supplies off the tarmac and into the sites, but also the transport of critically ill patients- the roads are jammed with traffic, there is little fuel, and ambulances sit dormant at the larger agencies.







