While gang violence and insecurity continue across many parts of Haiti, behind the doors of select hospitals and clinics, life goes on: Babies are born, wounds are tended, chronic illness is treated.
At facilities run by Zanmi Lasante [ZL], as Partners In Health is known in Haiti, teams have had to adjust to the kidnappings, fuel shortages, and general uncertainty through safety precautions such as shifting hours and schedules, relocating staff and patients, and restricting some facilities to basic triage. To avoid risky travel on dangerous roads, some staff have gone months without seeing family to stay closer to work. At certain sites, conversations between patients and doctors are interrupted by gunfire. Still, care continues.
Despite a situation described by one doctor as “practicing war medicine,” and, essentially, the worst violence the ZL team has seen in four decades, these medical professionals remain at work, tending to the sick, offering care, and accompanying their patients. Indeed, this is what solidarity looks like. This is ekip solid–a strong team.
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