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Operating Room Nurses
Deploy to Haiti

A team of operating room nurses packed their bags Monday for
assignment Wednesday aboard the U.S. hospital Naval ship USNS
Comfort, the first in what is expected to be a series of
continual deployments with the Navy disaster relief effort in
Haiti for volunteers with the NNU's Registered Nurse Response
Network.
"You see these things happening and think I wish some way I
could do something about it," said one of the nurses Tim Thomas
on Monday. "It's so far away and those people are so cut off.
Most of us really can't do anything apart from writing a check.
So I think this is an extremely rare opportunity because only a
handful of people get to do the hands on care."
RNRN/NNU has signed an agreement with the Navy for continuous
assignments in the Navy's relief mission, beginning with the
Comfort, currently off the coast of Port-Au-Prince, and then
expected to include an expeditionary medical treatment facility
the Navy is setting up on the ground in Haiti.
This is expected to be an ongoing relief campaign that may
continue for months in the healing and recovery process for
Haiti.
Report Back from Haiti...
Concurrently, a delegation of RNRN representatives returned
from Haiti last week after meeting with a number of U.S. and
international governmental, non-governmental, private and faith
organizations and medical support agencies to review other
potential assignments with a sobering assessment of the chaotic
conditions on the ground.

At many sites, groups were devoid of food, medical supplies,
and ability to accommodate teams of relief workers, a problem
that groups wishing to help around the world have also
experienced.
Not only are countless numbers of Haitians homeless and in
need of food and other basics and medical care, many of the
agencies on the ground have great difficulty providing the
critical assistance that is needed.
"Haiti was already the poorest country in the Western
Hemisphere and the disaster has only aggravated the crisis,"
said Gerard Brogan, RN, after his return last Friday. "Food is
hard to get, there is almost no running water or electricity and
open sewers everywhere. It's frustrating that nurses may not be
able to give the care they've been trained to provide."
But RNRN staff are continuing to plan arrangements while
other RNRN volunteers deploy with the Navy.
RN Voices...
"I
thought it was devastating and how frightened the people must
be," says Patricia Taylor of Chicago, another OR nurse
heading to the Comfort. "I kept thinking about how I would feel
if I was there, and praying for them not to lose hope. I was
raised to help people that need help. It was nothing heroic,
just plain common decency."
Thomas, an OR nurse at Watsonville (Ca.) Community Hospital,
has his own-post-earthquake disaster relief experience closer to
home. His town Watsonville was one of the hardest hit in the
1989 Loma Prieta quake in Northern California, after which the
damaged hospital was shutdown "and we did surgery out in the
parking lot."
This won't be his first disaster mission outside Watsonville.
Thomas reports he has volunteered for medical missions, in China
and India for "where the resources were limited. It's
always a consideration what resources can we apply to this
person, given what we have."
"My biggest concern is that we are able to match up resources
with needs and end up having helped some people as opposed to
getting there and not having something we need to accomplish our
mission and having it be less productive than we imagine,"
Thomas notes.
Are Your Vaccinations Up to Date?
Anyone who is deployed in the Haiti relief effort will need
Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Typhoid, Tetanus, MMR vaccinations and
malaria pills. Please maintain records of your vaccinations.
While not everyone will ultimately be able to be sent, completed
vaccinations will hasten this effort.
And thanks again for volunteering for this heroic effort.
In Unity,
Registered Nurse Response Network National Nurses
United
www.RNResponseNetwork.org www.NationalNursesUnited.org
2000 Franklin Street Oakland, CA 94612
Donations are welcome at: www.SendANurse.org
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