Friday, April 27, 2012 

Lorie Butler Blogs on Haiti, Nursing, & Faith

Realizing I needed to write in the FIH Blog I was finding it hard to write something when it’s been so long since I’ve been there.  However, being that Nurses’ week approaching us I thought about it and thought that it might be appropriate to talk a little about how my past trips to Haiti inspires my work as a nurse. 

There isn’t a day that doesn’t go by that I don’t think about the people of Haiti.  Since my first trip there in 2002, Haiti has remained close in my heart.  I’m sure that when some hear Haiti, the thoughts that come to their mind are “hostility”, perhaps “poor” and “earthquake”.  When I think about Haiti, I think of warm, beautiful  people, children playing, smiles that will warm your heart on the coldest day, people that have a heart of gold and a pocket without money and faith in the Lord stronger than any concrete.  On a Sunday morning you can hear the voices from a church singing and praising their Lord and they are so beautiful.  After everything they have been through over the past two years and to have such an incredible belief in their Lord, now that is faith. 

Life to a Haitian is not easy.  Everything is work and hard work at that.  One has to work hard just to eat.  Hard work and hard labor just too perhaps earn or barter some food.  Then they need to either purchase some firewood or go and find some to cook on and still they have to cook the food on the wood which burns like charcoal.  The people of Haiti walk everywhere to obtain their food, their water, to do their wash, to go to school or to work.  Only some are fortunate enough to take a tap-tap (taxi) or own a bike or moped.  The very fortunate might have a beat up car or truck.  Everything is dusty.  Very few places having running water(artisan well) or sewer(septic), sewage  usually runs down the side of the street, the things that you and I take for granted everyday or panic when the power goes off for 1-2 hours, the  people of Haiti have never had these luxuries ever.

To just walk in a Haitian’s shoes for a day, would we be strong enough to do that?  What part of you do you think would actually give in first?  You’re tired feet from all of your walking everywhere? Your tired fatigued body from all your labored work for little to no pay to try to feed your family with or your aching belly that cries in pain from hunger because the last time you had something to eat was yesterday morning and that was only a piece of bread and the day before was a bowl of rice at lunch time.  Or is it the nausea from the sewer that runs down the side of the street that you see and smell.  Haiti has a distinct smell that just never leaves you. 

One might say why go to Haiti………..I say why not?  I go because I can give to people who are so less fortunate than I and just the conversation and sharing of their experience and time I receive from any one person I consider myself blessed to of had that time.   The US dollar goes a lot further to treat more people that have nothing in Haiti.   Nursing in Haiti takes me back to the roots of nursing, where there are the hands on Nursing and you use your assessment skills without relying on technology to figure things out.  Everyone is appreciative and grateful for all you do.  There’s no lengthy documentation to keep us away from our patients either.  We give teaching to our patient’s as well and they listen to every word we have to say so intently.  It is true nursing at its best!   There are times when you feel so good about what you are doing and then once in awhile there is a sad case when despite your best efforts and all your medicine the outcome is grave.  All you have left is faith and prayers so you stop and you pray with the family.  This is nursing. 

It’s been almost five long years since my last venture to Haiti and I’m overdue for a Haitian fix, back to the root of compassion, caring, teaching and real hands on nursing.   I long to walk off that plane and feel that hot sticky air hit me and breathe that familiar smell that tells me I am here to do my work that brings me the greatest satisfaction and joy and really hits home as to why I became a nurse.    

Tuesday, April 24, 2012 

Dear Friends and Supporters,

Since 2001 - nearly a decade before the Haitian Earthquake - Forward in Health (FIH) has been working tirelessly to provide medical aid in Haiti alongside countless doctors, nurses, and other volunteers. In January 2010, when the tragic earthquake struck, Forward in Health’s mission to improve the health conditions and dignity of the people in Les Cayes only intensified, as local need drastically deepened.

Since the earthquake in January 2010, FIH continues to send volunteer teams to Haiti to provide clinical care, deliver donations, and lend much-needed support to the people of Les Cayes. Stateside, FIH, the Board of Directors, and numerous community supporters have spent hundreds of hours sorting supplies and collecting in-kind donations, lending technical support from afar, and raising funds for this worthy cause. Forward in Health also works closely with a talented in-country team, led by Hal, the Construction Manager and Evens, the Country Representative.
Since 2006, FIH has dreamt of opening a permanent clinic structure in Les Cayes to sustainably serve the surrounding community – both when visiting medical teams arrive, and after they depart. After the earthquake, the local need for this clinic was even greater. With construction well underway, the FIH Health Clinic is thrilled to open its doors for the first time to the local community later this year.  This clinic will provide care to Haitians who previously could not access healthcare services – and will truly breathe new life into realizing FIH’s central mission.
We thank you deeply for your support of FIH over the years, and your solidarity in our shared mission of providing quality healthcare in Haiti. We will be in touch soon with more exciting news on the clinic developments and how you can be involved. To see the latest updates about FIH, please visit our website at www.forwardinhealth.org and be sure to check out our Blog http://forwardinhealth.blogspot.comfor the most recent stories from Fonfrede.
Sincerely,




Wednesday, April 18, 2012 

Local GHS Students Break the Rules for Charity

Students at Gardner High School broke the rules on January 12th by wearing their baseball caps to school.

Stepping outside the boundaries and breaking a rule that is banned in most middle and high schools, these students took the time to each wear a hat on one particular day—not to go against the administration—but for a genuinely good cause.

On this “Hats for Haiti” day, the students spent $2 each to wear their hats for the day, and the money was then donated to the GHS’s “Forward in Health” non-profit organization club.

This club fundraises for the “Forward in Health” organization that was started in 2006 by husband and wife, Paula and John Mulqueen of Gardner, MA, who provide people in Haiti with much needed medical care.

Medical care is very obscure in most parts of Haiti, and has become an ongoing struggle for Haitian people.

Since a Haitian person typically survives on just $2 a day, each donation that students made through “Hats for Haiti” actually sustained the life of one person for another day.  

This was the first “Hats for Haiti” day that has been sponsored by Gardner High School. However, the hope is that this will become an annual event to keep a stream of revenue available to the FIH relief fund, each year. This fundraiser will be held on or around January 12th of each year, which is the anniversary of the earthquake that occurred in Haiti in 2010.

FIH founders, Paula and John, are hopeful that they will be able to open up this fundraising day to other local schools in the area, giving more students the opportunity to give back to the world.

Sunday, April 15, 2012 

Students Inspiring FIH



Construction of the Forward in Health medical clinic continues to progress as we are now able to see the finish line. The roof of the entire clinic building is on, rough plumbing and the electrical are complete. It has been seven years since Forward in Health was formed. At the time we had a vision for lasting medical care in a community in Haiti without access to even the most basic health care. No one on the initial Forward in Health board had any experience building and establishing a medical clinic in a third world country. What we had was determination and passion. Members of Forward in Health saw a community without medical care and decided that this was a situation we could help. Board members all had skills to bring; medical, legal, engineering, etc. Why shouldn’t we do this?
We were all a little too naïeve to know how difficult this was going to be. That was probably good, because if we had known that it would take seven years, more hours than we care to think about, and obstacles we could never could have imagined to finally get to this point, it is very possible that we would never have begun.
So what has sustained the many volunteers who make up Forward in Health? As many times as we have been let down and disappointed by people and situations, there have been just as many wonderful surprises we never could have imagined. Chief among them has been the energy, optimism, and “why not” attitude of the many high school and college students who have traveled with us. The spirit that young adults bring is refreshing and inspiring. Members of FIH cannot help but be inspired when they see the eyes of a student light while cradling a baby in an orphanage or holding the hand of a member of neglected senior citizens living in a “nursing home”.
Tuesday April 16th the second group of high school students in 4 weeks will be traveling to the Les Cayes area of Haiti with FIH. Up until 1 month ago student trips had been put on hold, first by the earthquake in 2010 and then by the cholera epidemic in 2011. But student groups are back and inspiring. Wide eyed and energetic, the students have already brought a smile to the collective face of FIH. So thanks to the students who care enough to want to go, the parents willing to step aside and let their children grow, and the chaperones and school leaders who make this happen.
Finally a boat load of gratitude to Paula Mulqueen, RN, co-founder and leader of the student trips. Paula organizes all aspects of the trips both in the US and in Haiti, introduces and orients the students and their parents to Haiti, and leaves her family to travel with the groups.
Paula’s many sacrifices are being recognized Thursday April 19, 2012 by HOPE (House of Peace and Education  http://hopegardner.org/index.php  ). She will be one of two recipients that evening being honored as a remarkable woman. The highlight of the evening will be listening to Gloria Steinem, legendary feminist and icon. Congratulations to Paula and thanks to the many students who have helped to inspire her work. Paula will be in Haiti and miss the event. Her husband and the other co-founder, John Mulqueen, will accept the award for her. He would love to see many of the FIH supporters there. For tickets go to http://celebratingwomen2012.eventbrite.com/ .