An academic center's delivery of care after the Haitian earthquake

Annals of Internal Medicine
Amir K JafferWilliam W O'Neill

Abstract

The Miller School of Medicine of the University of Miami and Project Medishare, an affiliated not-for-profit organization, provided a large-scale relief effort in Haiti after the earthquake of 12 January 2010. Their experience demonstrates that academic medical centers in proximity to natural disasters can help deliver effective medical care through a coordinated process involving mobilization of their own resources, establishment of focused management teams at home and on the ground with formal organizational oversight, and partnership with governmental and nongovernmental relief agencies. Proximity to the disaster area allows for prompt arrival of medical personnel and equipment. The recruitment and organized deployment of large numbers of local and national volunteers are indispensable parts of this effort. Multidisciplinary teams on short rotations can form the core of the medical response.

Citations

Dec 18, 2012·Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness·Ryan M WalkShawn D Safford
Sep 29, 2012·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Christine BabcockChristopher Olopade
Apr 12, 2011·Pediatric Critical Care Medicine : a Journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies·Amélie von Saint André-von ArnimEricka L Fink
Mar 1, 2011·Einstein·Milton SteinmanClaudio Luiz Lottenberg
Oct 12, 2017·Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges·Patricia A McQuilkinRoseda Marshall
Apr 1, 2012·Trauma Monthly·Mohammad Hosein Kalantar MotamediMostafa Kalantar Motamedi
Feb 7, 2017·Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness·Mahshid AbirMelinda Moore

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