Numerous members of the Johns Hopkins
community are involved in coming to the aid of the
tsunami survivors, both as individuals and as members
of relief teams.
Hopkins Medicine leaders worked
with a team of three ED nurses from Bayview, Brian
Wahl, Emily Seay and Audrey Rutkowski, seeking permission
to join a relief mission enroute to Jakarta and
then on to remote regions of Indonesia. With the
help of HR and our law office we have arranged for
them to be gone for one month, and they already
have left for that devastated nation. They will
be joining at least one or two other Hopkins medical
colleagues, including emergency medicine physician
and fellow Alex Vu, M.D., who also is part of the
Center for International Emergency Disaster and
Refugee Studies (CIEDRS), housed in the Bloomberg
School of Public Health and jointly sponsored by
BSPH and the Department of EM. This team leaves
Tuesday, January 4, and is coordinating its efforts
through the International Rescue Committee. Once
in Indonesia, they will provide direct medical relief
to disaster victims and assist with establishing
a surveillance system to monitor infectious disease
and injuries resulting from the disaster.
Another group, of Sri Lankan descent,
is prepared to travel to Sri Lanka as part of an
International Medical Health Organization team,
as soon as the bottleneck at airports allows. Based
on intelligence they have from the ground in remote
parts of that country, we will provide much needed
drugs and medical supplies for their team. Among
those involved in helping to coordinate this effort
are Arjun Chanmugam, the residency program director
in Emergency Medicine, Ananda Kumar of the Radiology
Department, and Ruben Amarasingham of Internal Medicine.
Faculty leading the efforts are Greg Greenough and
Chayan Dey. Ken Grant and Bob Feroli are assisting
this team.
CIEDRS is involved with providing
technical assistance to NGOs, UN agencies, and local
governments affected by both human-generated and
natural disasters. In that context the Center is
sending one faculty (Earl Wall) and one MPH student
(Brian Crawford) to assist in public health assessments
in Aceh, Indonesia, in addition to the team led
by Alex Vu.
Faculty, alumni and students of
the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
who are currently in the countries swept by the
tsunami are doing their utmost to aid the survivors
and protect health. In the past, the School has
trained more than 170 public health workers from
South Asia in disaster management courses. One such
course was completed just months ago. This is critically
important as the best thing we can do to meet these
emergencies is to continue to build and train an
indigenous infrastructure and manpower.
Many of you have asked whether Johns
Hopkins will be collecting money to send overseas.
We encourage individuals to donate to bona fide
relief organizations and have provided a list. Dean
Al Sommer, of the Bloomberg School, notes that he
learned firsthand 30 years ago in Bangladesh that
the greatest immediate need in this kind of disaster
is water, food and shelter, and direct contributions
to the relief organizations on the ground are most
helpful in the immediate aftermath.
While we have attempted to give
a preliminary overview of the Hopkins response to
the tsunami, others also may be involved.
SOURCE:
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2005/01_05a_05.html