Haitian MSF staff determined to help their people

Despite personal losses, MSF’s Haitian staff continue to provide emergency assistance to their people. MSF International President, Dr. Christophe FOURNIER, offers condolences and sincere thanks.

Haitian surgeon Dr. Philippe Brouard has worked with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) at Trinité hospital in Port-au-Prince since 2006. The morning after the earthquake, he came to work at the trauma surgery centre only to find that most of Trinité had collapsed. Two of his colleagues and several patients were killed. MSF immediately evacuated surviving patients from the hospital to continue treating them outside, while wounded people from the surrounding area flooded toward the hospital that was no longer there. Dr. Brouard did triage on that first day: identifying patients who needed urgent medical attention. By the second day he was doing amputations in an improvised operating theatre because the ones inside the decimated structure could no longer be used.

"The patients kept demanding your attention, touching you,” recalls Brouard. “‘Please doctor here, don’t forget me!’ they would say. You do all you can but there are always so many people calling you. Of course we are forced to prioritise, but while we were seeing one patient we would try comfort the others, say a kind word: ‘Don’t worry, we won’t forget you.”

Dr. Brouard feels lucky that his family is safe and his house is still standing, but he has not come out of the quake unaffected. “You focus on the patients all day – you cure people – but when you go home you see the state of your country and that does something to you,” he says. “You see the supermarket that collapsed, the bank that is at risk of falling down. You can’t help thinking what life is going to be like in a week, in a month, in a year?”

Unlike Dr. Brouard, many other Haitian staff-members lost their homes and family members. Charles JOSEPH, a social worker at MSF’s Martissant hospital, lost a cousin and his entire house in the earthquake. “Now we are in the streets with the children, my wife, everyone,” he says. “I have come to work because this is a disaster and it is my business, it is everyone’s business. If people from other countries can risk their lives and come here to cure people – me, as a Haitian, I must do the same.”

The commitment and hard work of MSF’s Haitian staff has been crucial to save lives in the immediate aftermath of earthquake. Prior to the disaster, the medical humanitarian organisation had more than 800 Haitians staffing three hospitals in the capital. MSF has confirmed that four employees died in the quake and six others remain unaccounted for.

MSF’s international president, Dr. Christophe Fournier, came to Port-au-Prince to offer the organisation’s deepest condolences to Haitian colleagues who have continued working despite tragedies both on a personal and a national level.

"I would like to say to you that everyone in MSF, all over the world, shares your pain, your grief,” he told a meeting with Haitian staff at Martissant hospital. “We are all thinking of you. So many of you have lost your houses, friends, family members. And yet you are all here working hard to save lives, to treat people. In the name of all the MSF movement, I want to thank you and to say that we are all together and we will support you while you recover from this disaster.”

In the streets of Port-au-Prince, people struggle to get on with their lives in the midst of rubble. “We are used to hurricanes but an earthquake was the last thing we expected,” explains Brouard. “It will take time to recover. This country has had a huge material loss we have also lost some human capital. We have lost some great minds, some brilliant people. They have to be replaced, it will take time. What is going to happen to this country?” he asks

Location
Haiti