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A
mother and her child wait to be seen at a health
clinic in Haiti. |
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (May 30,
2007) – With a generous donation of US$10,000
from the Community of Christ, Counterpart International
procured more than a million dollars worth of
pharmaceuticals in partnership with Medicines for Humanity
and airlifted them to Haiti for use in clinics run by the
United Nations and Doctors Without Borders.
"The pharmaceuticals will benefit about 9,200 of Haiti's
most vulnerable, particularly women and children, through an
outreach effort by international aid organizations and local
clinics," said Dr. Thoric Cederström, Counterpart's Vice
President of Food Security and Sustainable Agriculture.
As the Western Hemisphere's poorest country, Haiti faces
significant health challenges. Socio-political conflict in
Haiti also has made it extremely difficult for medical
supplies to be safely delivered to hospitals and clinics.
Patients often remain untreated as pharmaceutical resources
are exhausted and additional supplies do not arrive.
As violence persists, the current United Nations
Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) is working to
maintain civil order in the streets and to treat the sick in
hospitals and clinics. Thanks to the airlift, Counterpart
and UN medical workers will alleviate the stress on medical
supplies in Haiti's resource-poor medical facilities.
Building on relationships developed through Counterpart's
school feeding program in Senegal, West Africa,
Counterpart's shipment was processed by its Community and
Humanitarian Assistance Programs (CHAP), and was received
and managed by the Senegalese MINUSTAH contingent.
The Senegalese peacekeeping contingent in Haiti has provided
more than 30 free medical consultations a day since August
2005. Over the last year, they have seen more than 4,000
patients at their clinic, the majority of whom have been
women and children. |