[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 104 (Wednesday, July 14, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H5591-H5592]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING ISRAELI HUMANITARIAN EFFORTS IN HAITI
(Ms. BERKLEY asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute and to revise and extend her remarks.)
Ms. BERKLEY. Madam Speaker, I am going to be putting into the
Congressional Record an article in the Annals of Internal Medicine
entitled Early Disaster Response in Haiti: the Israeli Field Hospital
Experience. It talks about how the Israeli Defense Forces Medical Corps
Field Hospital was fully operational only 89 hours after the earthquake
struck and was capable of providing sophisticated medical care. In the
10 days the hospital was operational, the Israelis treated over 1,100
patients, hospitalized 737 patients, and performed 244 operations. At
the same time, the Iranians were shipping Scud missiles through Syria
to Hezbollah to rearm them on the northern border of Israel; the Turks
were trying to create an international incident with their ridiculous
flotilla; the Iraqis, the Sunnis and the Shiites kept killing each
other. In Pakistan, the government seems to be immobile when it comes
to the terrorist attacks in that country. In Afghanistan, the Taliban
keeps killing Americans; and Hamas continues to terrorize its own
Palestinian people in the Gaza. All of that while the Israelis are
actually doing something important for humanity. I think we ought to
wake up and appreciate what the Israelis do.
[From Annals of Internal Medicine, May 4, 2010]
Early Disaster Response in Haiti: The Israeli Field Hospital Experience
(By Yitshak Kreiss, MD, MHA, MPA; Ofer Merin, MD; Kobi Peleg, PhD, MPH;
Gad Levy, MD; Shlomo Vinker, MD; Ram Sagi, MD; Avi Abargel, MD, MHA;
Carmi Bartal, MD, MPH; Guy Lin, MD; Ariel Bar, MD, MHA; Elhanan Bar-On,
MD; Mitchell J. Schwaber, MD, MSc; and Nachman Ash, MD, MS)
(The earthquake that struck Haiti in January 2010 caused an
estimated 230,000 deaths and injured approximately 250,000
people. The Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps Field
Hospital was fully operational on site only 89 hours after
the earthquake struck and was capable of providing
sophisticated medical care. During the 10 days the hospital
was operational, its staff treated 1111 patients,
hospitalized 737 patients, and performed 244 operations on
203 patients. The field hospital also served as a referral
center for medical teams from other countries that were
deployed in the surrounding areas.
The key factor that enabled rapid response during the early
phase of the disaster from a distance of 6000 miles was a
well-prepared and trained medical unit maintained on
continuous alert. The prompt deployment of advanced-
capability field hospitals is essential in disaster relief,
especially in countries with minimal medical infrastructure.
The changing medical requirements of people in an earthquake
zone dictate that field hospitals be designed to operate with
maximum flexibility and versatility regarding triage, staff
positioning, treatment priorities, and hospitalization
policies. Early coordination with local administrative bodies
is indispensable.)
An earthquake measuring 7.0 on the Richter magnitude scale
struck close to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on 12 January 2010.
The official death toll was set at 230,000, and local
authorities estimated that 250,000 people were injured. This
catastrophic event galvanized a strong and rapid response
worldwide, and the Israeli government quickly decided to
launch a medical humanitarian mission to provide medical care
as advanced as possible under the circumstances.
Whereas the fate of patients with life-threatening
internal-organ injuries is determined within the first hours
of a disaster, early provision of treatment for the
multitudes of patients with open fractures can prevent life-
threatening sepsis and limb-threatening infections. In
addition, situations involving substantial casualties
combined with extensive damage to local medical facilities
and infrastructure highlight
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the need for a resourceful, experienced, and trained medical
team backed by a logistics contingent. The Israel Defense
Forces Medical Corps (IDF-MC) Field Hospital comprises such a
unit.
The field hospital staff consisted of 121 servicemen and
servicewomen (Appendix Table 1, available at www.annals.org)
and was organized into medical, surgical, orthopedic,
pediatric, gynecologic, and ambulatory care divisions, as
well as auxiliary units (Appendix Figure, available at
www.annals.org), with a capacity of 60 inpatient beds that
could be expanded to 72.
To ensure maximum optic independence and to shorten the
time to deployment, we brought all hospital supplies; a fully
stocked pharmacy, including sufficient oral antibiotics to be
distributed on discharge; imaging machinery; a laboratory
that could perform blood tests and urine chemistry,
hematology, blood gases, and microbiology analyses; and
autoclaves for sterilization. Energy sources (generators) and
accommodations (tents and latrines) were also brought from
Israel. This crucial effort was carried out by a highly
trained, skilled logistics unit of 109 personnel, including
computer and communication specialists, security staff,
kitchen staff, carpenters, plumbers, mechanics, electricians
and a burial team.
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