SFO - Miami - Port au Prince. We collected at SFO, ready for a 10
day trip to Haiti (pronounced i-e- tea), to join a group from Harvard for a Global Health Bootcamp.
Despite some typical airport delays, missed flights, and sprinting
through the airport, our fearless program directors Sri and Phuoc navigated our safe and
timely arrival in the newly rebuilt airport of Port Au Prince.
The ride from the airport was filled with stories of the 2010
earthquake and its devastation, and Sri and Phuoc's experiences witnessing and
navigating the chaos and providing medical care. From the road, it there looked
to be some signs of recovery. The airport was entirely new. You could no
longer simply drive onto the runway. The military presence was gone.
Brick-making and signs of construction lined sections of the road from the
airport, and a tent city that had been erected to house the earthquake victims,
and had become home to many for the prolonged recovery had nearly totally been
dismantled.
So what again were we doing in Haiti? We'd be spending our time
learning from the fine folks of Partners in Health (PIH), aka Zanmi
Lasante (ZL) (in Creole), a Boston-based NGO that has been working in Haiti for
the last 30 years, founded on core values of social justice, their mission is
to improve the health of the underserved Haitian community. Over this time,
their primary focus of providing healthcare has expanded to address the
underlying determinants of that health as well.
The first stop in our introduction to the scope of PIH related
projects was Zanmi Beni (http://www.zbchildren.org/). It is an orphanage for
some fifty children, most with special needs, that were homeless or displaced
after the earthquake. A main building and land was purchased and developed into
a lovely space with playground, physical therapy, music therapy, and school.
While none of the children are up for adoption, that have recruited people to
be new parents to the children and have recreated a style of family support.
As we were taken to the back of Zanmi Beni, we were introduced to
a project by Operation Blessing (http://www.ob.org/_where/haiti/) where they
were developing a large scale tilapia fish farm. Aiming to address the protein
deficiencies in the country, the NGO has set up an industrial fish farm employs
locals learning how to raise, breed, and make a sustainable business out of
providing fish to their community. Did you know that fish remains make great fertilizer?
From Port Au Prince, we headed by van up the now paved road,
courtesy of the UN earthquake relief, to Cange, the initial site of ZL. We
pulled up to ZL, a castle-like complex, set on a hill. Its walls were
retaining walls, built elegantly into the hillside, its gardens, restored
tropical forests enshrouded the dormitories and clinic buildings. Situated on a
hill, the van bumped up the driveway and we piled out to settle into our newly
built accommodations for the week and then gathered in a dining room, large and
sparsely decorated with huge windows overlooking a verdant valley.
Our introductions were exciting. The room percolated with the
energy of like-minded passionate people, most us were, likely me, at the
beginning of a career in global health, and some who have worked for decades
Haiti or other sites in their struggles for equity. We were a multidisciplinary
roundtable of residents and fellows in internal medicine, pediatrics and
psychiatry, a group of engineers working on the water supply system, an
economist, mental health workers, and some of the leadership of PIH.
With a quick recap of ZL history by Joia Mukherjee and Paul
Farmer, Joia pointed out that our being here was a time for the leadership to
share more than the model of ZL, but the vision of health and social justice
that had sustained them through the years. The core tenet is the belief in
social equity; that a poor person's life matters as much as a rich person's.
The drive to develop this equity has framed the work they've done over the
years starting with the premise that healthcare is a human right. Their
model emphasizes a multifaceted approach. So often in global health, prevention
is pitted against secondary care. Paul pointed out that that is a fallacy, and
in fact you need to have both to make effective gains in development. As such
their work addresses coordinated hospital, clinic, and community based care.
They have directed program funds towards consolidating user fees to eliminate
barriers to accessing care, establishing access to essential drugs,
capacitating staff by paying them more than standard wage, and hiring an army
of community healthcare workers.
Amidst their stories and lessons, Joia identified what she
believes are the two main principles in developing global health as a human
right: 1. engaging the community, and 2. engaging and reinforcing the
government. As they have grown their organization, they are working to scale
their model in collaboration with the public sector to address the underlying
issues such as poverty, education, and nutrition.
While the projects I've seen today in some ways seem disparate, I
am struck by the clarity of the ZL vision and the way in which it seems that
every aspect of the program is a direct reflection of their core values. Like
spokes in a wheel, they radiate from the same core: Health is a human right. In
addressing health care, they are addressing the impediments to health:
Malnutrition by promoting fish farming, barriers to accessing care by creating
a charge free multilevel health system, environmental health by planting trees,
and healing a fracture in the community by developing an orphanage that
restores the community spirit. Each project is a spoke and together they generate
a more stable wheel.


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