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Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
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Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique

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Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique Empty Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique

Message  revelation Jeu 1 Avr 2010 - 13:43

Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique Image011%20(Custom)Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique Image001%20(Custom)


Dr. Luther Castillo receives the Henry Reeve International Medical Contingent banner from Cuban Minister of Health, Dr. Jose Ramon Balaguer, on eve of contingent’s departure for Haiti (Feb. 11).
Courtesy of: Alberto Borrego, Granma

Cuban Vice President Esteban Lazo and Dr. Wing San Wu, US graduate of the Latin American Medical School, one of 7 US graduates working at Cuban field hospital in Croix des Bouquets outside Port-au-Prince.Courtesy of: Juvenal Balán, Granma


Haiti-Cuba-Brezil Vont Travailler Ensemble sur la Sante Publique HAITI2033N0%20(Small)

Pandan ke gouvenman Obama a ap batay pou’l passe yon lwa sou sante piblik nan peyi Eta-Zuni pou tout moun a la rand bade jwen yon tisouyen medikal, Haiti-Cuba-Brezil a kole tet ansamb pou yo pote souyen sante bay pep ayisyen.

Gen anpil fre ak se nou yo ki pa jamb jwen konsiltasyon nan men yon dokte.


Prezans Dokte sa yo non selman pran souyen malere men gen anpil granneg nan peyi d’Ayiti se Cuba ke yo al pran soyen oliye ke yo al Miami, Floride paske souyenyaj la pi bon e li meye mache.

Map voye yon gwo kout chapo bay gouvenman Ayisyen, Cuben e Brezilyen pou inyon sa pou sevis pep la.

Fok mwen di an passan ke’m ale Havana, Santiago e nan zon Guantanamo nan Cuba, system politik Cuben an se kwaze zo,

fanm kou gason pa gen dwa pale kont rejim diktati ki an plas depi plis ke 50 tan,

cuben pa gen dwa kite ‘ile la si se pa avek yon delegasyon gouvenmantal ;
pa gen demokrasi se sa yo di pou’m fe, pa gen entrepreneurship ni bizniss pesonel,
pa gen ni radyo ni TV ki kap di sa yo vle ni bay komante sou rejim Castro a.

Ma’l Rio de Janiero o Brezil nan getto carioca kote ki pi mal ke Cite Soleil lakay nou.

Malere sa yo se nan yon « camps de concentration » ke yo ye kote ke yon ap touye lot, drug ak prostitisyon fe kinken e gouvenman ak la polis femen je yo sou sa.

Peyi sa yo bay sevis sosyal de baz gratis se vle,

men pep la peye yon pri pou sa yon lot fason,
yo pedi dwa humen e dwa politik yo. Nan peyi sa yo si yon moun pa gen talan, li pap fasil pou yo pesse dan la vi. E memm si yo gen talan, fok se yon etranje ki pou expoze yo bay le mond.

Sa se opiniyon pa’m. ipokrit ti koulout, kap panse jan yo vle.
Fok nou sonje ke se pa tout sa ki klere pa l’o. Chak system gen bon e move kote pa yo tou.
Healing Body and Heart, Cuban Style: Alternative Health Care in Haiti

The governments of Cuba, Brazil, and Haiti signed a trilateral accord on March 27 to rebuild the public health system in Haiti. Brazil committed $US80 million toward the effort and pledged to create a national epidemiologic surveillance network. The Cuban contribution includes more than 1,600 doctors, a couple of hundred of whom were already in Haiti when the earthquake hit and who acted as first responders. Most of the medical delegation came shortly after the earthquake, to provide top-quality health care for two years.

Since 1999, a several-hundred-strong team of Cuban-trained and Cuban-sponsored doctors (with individual members rotating in and out) have staffed city hospitals and rural clinics throughout Haiti. Without charge to patient or government, they have focused their attention primarily in remote areas, offering general medical care to many who have never before received it and who otherwise may have died. The doctors also provide eye surgery, and have served as first responders after hurricanes.

The team that arrived since the January 12 earthquake is part of the Henry Reeve Cuban Medical Brigade, a post-disaster operation formed to offer assistance to survivors of Hurricane Katrina. The U.S. government refused their help, but the team has since gone to Pakistan after a major earthquake, Indonesia after the tsunami, and a half-dozen or so other places that have suffered major catastrophes. In February, part of the brigade was dispatched to Chile after an earthquake hit there.

The doctors are committed to health care that is free and accessible to everyone, and that is rooted in dignity and respect. One of them, Dr. Wilsos Canton, said that they "don't consider health care a business, but a right."

The doctors come from 25 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, and the Americas, including Haiti. They were all trained at the Cuban-run Latin American Medical School (ELAM), which has a branch in Venezuela. Their travel to Haiti and all their expenses are covered by the Cuban government. They receive a small stipend for such daily expenses as a soda or snack, but otherwise are 100% volunteer. Regardless of country of origin, they are known throughout Haiti as the 'Cuban doctors.'

ELAM has also trained, at no charge, 556 Haitian doctors in past years. As a condition for the education, the new doctors must return to work in Haiti.

The young physicians of the Henry Reeve Brigade are working in three hospital sites around the capitol, four community health posts, and hospitals in other towns and rural areas. In Carrefour and Croix-des-Bouquets, they have created field hospitals, where they provide 24-hour services with specialty care in pediatrics, surgery, intensive care, internal medicine, and gynecology. Teams of doctors also travel with backpacks full of supplies into displaced people's camps to treat those that cannot or do not come to them. Moreover, five teams, working six days a week, have vaccinated more than 70,000 people against dyptheria, tetanus, whooping cough, mumps, and measles.

At 9:00 on a recent morning, after a bus ride through the city's traffic-clogged streets, five of the 'Cuban doctors' hiked up the rocky street with large backpacks full of supplies and medicines. Arriving at their post in the Carrefour Feuilles neighborhood, they opened the sides of the tent that is permanently stationed there and hung a Cuban flag from it. They unpacked the medicines and arranged a couple of small wooden tables and some metal folding chairs, creating three care stations and a pharmacy.

Dr. David Alderete, an Argentine, sweated in the morning heat. His first patient was a 16-day-old baby, the daughter of a 19-year-old woman. After four days of diarrhea, the baby was malnourished and appeared lifeless. When Alderete lightly pinched the baby's arm, her skin held the shape of his pinch. He determined she needed to go to the hospital for re-hydration, explained to the mother where to go and who to talk with, and handed her a note for his Cuban colleagues on call at the hospital. She listened, agreed, and wrapped the baby back up in her little blankets. A few steps outside the tent, tears begin flowing down the woman's face.

Dr. Isaac Cañas from El Salvador said of the team's work, "I feel proud but a little sad, because what we can do is small compared to the need. It's our little grain of sand."

Later that evening, Alderete, Cañas, and other doctors compared notes about patients back at theirheadquarters, which is downtown in a former annex of a military hospital. Living conditions at the camp are primitive; doctors sleep in small tents and stand in line for showers. The camp is highly organized, complete with rotating chores, late-night guard duties, and early morning meetings. The space also provides community and festivity to sustain the workload. That night the men held a belated International Women's Day celebration. They decorated the dining hall with paper flowers, and kissed and congratulated the women. The players of a pick-up soccer game ceded the small courtyard as others turned up speakers for the Women's Day dance party.

A second group of Cuban healers has been at work in Haiti, as well. The Cuban government is sponsoring the Martha Machado Artists' Brigade, a troupe of musicians, dancers, jugglers, stilt-walkers, magicians, puppeteers, clowns, and painters. In response to the widespread trauma in Haiti, they offer mental health care through art, music, laughter and playfulness.

A collection of artists who first came together after a series of hurricanes in 2008 to perform for struggling communities throughout Cuba, the brigade currently has 50 volunteer members in Haiti. They will remain for a year. They are traveling throughout the country, performing daily outside hospitals, at displaced people's camps, and in the streets.

On another recent morning, the Martha Machado Artists' Brigade was outside the Hospital de Renaissance, while inside, members of the Henry Reeve Brigade were treating patients. In the streets, clowns and magicians had the audience laughing, a rare sight in Port-au-Prince these days. Next up was a group of Cubans of Haitian descent who sang in Creole. They pulled children up from the audience and in minutes all were dancing.

One young girl watched from her wheelchair on the sidelines, her face expressionless. One of her legs was amputated and the other was heavily bandaged. Spotting her, a woman in the troupe danced over to roll her into the middle of the group. A small circle formed around her, dancing and singing.

In the grand finale of the performance, stilt-walkers waved Cuban and Haitian flags chanting "Cuba! Haiti! Cuba! Haiti!" while the trumpets and drums moved the crowd in rhythm. Children snaked through the crowd in the Conga line.

At the ceremony to inaugurate the new trilateral accord, Cuban Health Minister Dr José Ramón Balaguer said, "What would the world look like if all men and women lent their skills and solidarity like those of Henry Reeve? It would be a world full of peace, of love - a different world."


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/beverly-bell/healing-body-and-heart-cu_b_521480.html#comments
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Message  revelation Jeu 1 Avr 2010 - 22:10

Si Cuba, Brezil ak Venezuela pran sekte Sante a an Hayiti, konstwi l'hopital, clinik ambilan, family planning, rechech scientifik, prodwi laboratwa etc.. Hayiti ap sou bonwout.

Si Kanada ak Le Zeta-Zini pran sekte infraktrikti, kanalizasyon d'ordure, wout, pon, elektrisite, kominikasyon, system banker, gestion, marketing, tourism, edikasyon a distans.

La Frans kap pran sekte achitekti, dekoration, landscaping, konstriktion musee e theat, lwa konstitionel, lwa penal. sektion edikasyon culliner, etc...

Fok chak peyi sa yo konnen sa ke yo pral fe dapre konnesans yo.
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Nombre de messages : 3086
Localisation : Washington, DC
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