Entries in help (4)

Tuesday
Jan262010

A letter from Haiti

With the holiday's finally over, I have to say I'm exhausted. Running around after 22-month-old, J, and 27 weeks preggers. Again I'm exhausted. I have a looming deadline to post my H1NI Vaccine findings and a Walt Disney World quick tip guide after our very recent trip. However, I, as well as many of you, cannot stop thinking about Haiti. Marta recently posted a letter that was forwarded to us via e-mail from our cousin. It is an inspirational letter that will hopefully pull at your heartstrings and get you to help Haiti in anyway that you can if you have not already. See below:

Dear Family and Friends,

I am so humbled and touched to see all of the kind words that have circulated via email and phone and Facebook regarding my trip to Haiti. Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers. I am almost embarrassed by the outpouring of support because I really don't feel that I did that much. Certainly nowhere near enough.

The situation in Haiti is dire. We've all heard about the unconscionable number of deaths, upwards of 100,000. Port-au-Prince is a city of rubble, human remains, human waste, homelessness, orphaned children, and disease. I can't begin to describe the injuries sustained and their anticipated long term sequelae. The country will not make it out of this catastrophe without our help.

Obviously there are no words to describe what I experienced over the past few days.  24 cases in 48 hours, 13 of which were amputations for crush injuries resulting in gangrene, or infected open fractures, adults and children alike.  It is an ugly but necessary aspect of saving patients from septic shock and death. All extremity surgeries were done under regional anesthesia (numbing of the main nerves to the leg or arm with long-acting anesthetics), as we had no oxygen and no ventilator machines. Thank Heaven for the UM regional anesthesia team led by Dr. Ralf Gebhard. No tourniquet. No lights in the operating room (used camping headlamps). No running water. No formal sterile processing of instruments (bleach and betadine). 

Despite the conditions, I'm happy to say we have not lost a single patient in the makeshift OR suite. People put their egos aside and did what they had to do.  I was deeply humbled by and in awe of the people around me. It wasn't just the surgeons: the medical and pediatric teams worked around the clock.  Considering how critically injured some of these patients are, the mortality rate at the UM facility has been astoundingly low (somewhere around 2%). This includes people rescued out of buildings on Day 7, and speaks to the quality of care being delivered.  In total, some 300+ patients have been treated at the UM field hospital.

The care that has been delivered so far, while impressive, is a mere drop in the bucket. However, because of the number of corporate and private donations, our capabilities are likely to increase exponentially with every day that passes.

Dr. Barth Green has tremendous contacts and organizational skills, not to mention a heart of gold. Alonzo Mourning was at the UM camp over the weekend and again yesterday. The ortho guys tell me that before I arrived, Zo was helping them apply splints and change dressings.  He has donated $1M toward building a new air conditioned field tent hospital. I flew down on a private jet owned by a businessman who is not only flying staff and med-evacuating the most critical patients to Miami on his plane, but paying for the fuel and crew out of his own pocket indefinitely.

Perhaps most personally moving of all, last night I arrived home to find out that my family's business, Med Lab Supply Company, had donated a Siemens C-arm fluoroscopy unit that is on its way to the field hospital. This is a tremendous step toward being able to properly treat fractures.

Despite this early support, there is a lot of work to be done, and there are still major logistical issues to getting personnel and equipment down there in an organized fashion. 
Project Medishare and the University of Miami are able to be effective in the aftermath of the earthquake because they had a strong presence in Haiti before it happened. UM faculty and residents are able to rotate traveling to Haiti to deliver care at the hospital, which is securely located on the United Nations compound.  I plan on returning soon as my professional and family responsibilities allow.

These poor people. They are so destitute. The conditions are horrid, and yet their spiritual strength is unshaken.  It's going to take a long, committed, and expensive effort if they have any hope of recovering what little they had before all of this happened.

If you have already made a donation, thank you. If not, kindly consider making one by joining my fund raising team on the Project Medishare website.  The link is at the end of this email.

I will end on a positive note. On my way home yesterday, I was at the Toussaint L'Ouverture airport and was approached by two women from a U.S.-based adoption agency to serve as an escort to a Haitian orphan.  I flew back with a 17 month-old baby boy and met his adoptive parents at MIA.  He literally became a U.S. citizen in my arms. Totally mind blowing. You will all be amused to know that when the girls from the adoption agency approached me, the baby (Paxton is his adoptive name), was of course a perfect angel. But the minute we got on the plane he turned into a little maniac! He was wild but adorable. I'm so psyched for him and his new life.

Thanks again to you all.

Warmly,

Veronica Diaz
Follow This Link to visit my personal web page and help me in my efforts to support Project Medishare for Haiti's Earthquake Relief Fund

 

Veronica, The Baby Mamas thank you for all you have done and your inspiring letter.

Sunday
Nov082009

To H1N1 Vaccine or Not?

Attention pregnant women and mamas everywhere! I am doing intense research on this new vaccine. Now I want to hear from you.

What are you going to do or what have you done? If you are pregnant what is your OB/GYN telling you to do and why? What are your thoughts? Mamas, will you be administering the vaccine to your little ones? What are your pediatricians telling you? What are your thoughts?

Please click here and share your thoughts, comments, opinions on your most recent research on this vaccine.

I will be posting my findings in a couple of weeks when I have done some more thorough research. Your comments will be extremely helpful to me and the other mamas facing the same dilemma. 

Thank you Mamas!

 

 

Thursday
Oct082009

Hives and Rashes and Eczema, Oh My!: THE SAGA (Part 2)

So it has been a while since I have updated my blog on this subject. Please refer to my last blog on this subject in case you are not up to date (Hives and Rashes and Eczema, Oh My!). After I blogged we waited the six weeks to go see the allergist in the meantime I made sure to follow the instructions the allergist told me to strictly follow until our next appointment. The instructions were basic keep him out of the sun between 11 and 3. When he IS the sun, make sure he has a long sleeve UV protective shirt on and loads of sunblock. Sunblock is a huge issue for J. He can barely use any of the brands. The only one that does not make him break out in to a rash is Mustela. Now, I can use Neutrogena Baby, but sparingly, and not on his face. Mustela is expensive but we do not have a choice, we live in South Florida and it is a daily MUST. We went on vacation and had a great time at the beach. No skin or allergy issues. Just pure fun. 

Finally the six weeks passed and it was time to go back to the allergist. J’s hives had all cleared up, he was not sick, did not have a rash, he was in perfect shape to be tested. I went armed with a bottle of milk, toys, books, his “binky” (or “boto” as he renamed it), and tons of snacks. I was not sure what we were in store for. Luckily, the testing was pretty easy. The ‘prick’ was very mild and J barely felt it. They pricked him about 100 times. The pricks were all placed on his back. After waiting for 15 minutes. The testing was over. Results: J is not allergic to ANYTHING! I was so relived. According to the doctors J’s hive outbreaks were due to a virus and nothing more.

However, very recently I received the allergist’s diagnosis in the mail and there it was: Urticaria (hives), allergic rhinitis, and ECZEMA. Eczema? I couldn’t believe it. I was told it was not eczema. So J broke out into hives AGAIN this month. It is a pattern. First he gets a slight rash on his torso, diarrhea for a week, and then once the diarrhea disappears, the hives appear. It seems to have been a virus again. No fever or vomiting just discomfort. This time it was not nearly as bad as before. Thank goodness. And it was gone in a couple of days. 

Time passed and then we started to notice that J was getting what appeared to be a diaper rash or burn on the sides of his hip and rings around his legs. The exact places where his diaper is constantly rubbing against his skin. Someone mentioned that he could be allergic to his diaper but I thought that was impossible since he has been using the same brand (Pamper Cruisers Ultra Absorbency) since he was born.

After about two weeks the rash began to get worse and worse no matter what we did. J started to tell us that the rash was hurting him and he did not want to put his diaper on. We tried putting tissues on the areas so the diaper would not rub against them but that did not work. So we went back to our trustworthy Dr. E.  I went with the allergist diagnosis in one hand and concern in the other. Is this eczema? Is it hives again? I couldn't figure it out. 

Dr. E looked at it and immediately said it was an allergic reaction to the diaper. He has seen many cases of the same rash recently and there is no explanation. He believes the Pampers company has changed their formula or has added a new chemical that is causing this reaction in toddlers with atopic allergies. 

We had to switch to Seventh Generation Chlorine Free diapers. Side note; I was concerned about overnight leakage since J would sometimes wake up wet even with the ultra absorbency diapers. So I have been putting a feminine pad in the diaper. I make it into a rainbow shape and place it as a blocker on the front inside part of the diaper before I put it on him. Just a quick tip in case you have the same issue. 

We have also been putting a prescription medication lotion on the rash called Cutivate (as recommended by Dr. E) for about a week. He is finally getting better. 

But I have to say we have changed our lives a little. I continue to flush out his wipes with before I start using them. I was given this tip before I was born and I still do it. It flushes away all that extra chlorine and it makes the wipes must softer to the touch. I also went back to my first blog on this subject (Hives and Rashes and Eczema, Oh My!) and reread, my friend, trusty LC's tips on controlling Eczema. Feel free to go back to it if your child has atopic allergies. It will certainly help. I will keep everyone updated on this subject. Oh, and don't worry I am in the process of writing an "informative" e-mail to the Pampers Company. 

 

Monday
May112009

New iphone Apps for Moms...

 

Attention all moms with iphone's: 

Here is a helpful link with new applications especially for moms.

http://bit.ly/71aYf