Sunday, December 02, 2007

ICC & the 40th Anniversary Celebration: what someone can do without leaving their home

I want to mention our hosts of this little sejours - "International Child Care" or ICC (see http://www.intlchildcare.org/) is an NGO focusing on Haiti & the DR for the last 40 years. One of the best parts of this week was getting to know members of the American board - ordinary Americans who have been touched in one way or another by Haiti & the challenges there. They are salesmen, nurses, physiotherapists, from all over the US and many had never thought of the world outside their borders before they got involved with Haiti. The American & Canadian members donate a great deal of time and effort to fundraising, while the local organisation and board focus more on programming - with dedicated Haitian staff throughout the country. At the two 40th anniversary celebration, many spoke of their pride in the organization and the lives that it impacted.

ICC has both the Grace Children's Hospital in Port-au-Prince, and community health centers and activities throughout Haiti, with activities like primary care, vaccination, and income generation / microcredit schemes.

Chuck Phelps & Jeannine Hatt acted as our hosts - they've been to Haiti at least twice a year for a number of years, and are very dedicated to the cause. They were incredibly warm and welcoming and put a lot of effort into ensuring that the two 'newbies' - myself and Sarah Kim (another former Pediatrics AIDS Corps doctor) - had a chance to see more of Haiti. (Photo, left to right - Sarah Kim, Jeannine Hatt, Claudy St Juste, Tyler Bloom, Chuck Phelps, Mesa, our driver - lunch stop on our medical tourism day).

Claudy St Juste was the master organizer - what a headache he had to organize 30 North Americans, the details for the congress, all the transport, etc. And yet he was consistently welcoming, friendly and gracious - and clearly dedicated to the organization.


Friday night was the formal celebration, with speeches, a video and excellent Haitian dancing by a group of young adults at least of some of which were former patients at ICC. This photo is the North Americans who came to speak in the conference.

Day 4 & 5 - Congres Medicale


The conference was really interesting. I really enjoyed hearing the Haitian presentations on HIV care, prevention of mother to child transmission, etc. There seem to be many NGOs here providing HIV & other pediatric care, and they are able to do things like TB prophylaxis for children of adults with TB. Haiti is an HIV vaccine study site and Dr Joseph provided an interesting overview of both the study (now stopped due to lack of efficacy) and the HIV vaccine process.

The medical congress was remniscent of being in Burkina Faso (though thankfully, the question period is less painful). We arrived around the scheduled start time, and things got rolling an hour or more later. Each speaker took more than their alloted time, so both days the conference finished 2 hours late.

I gave my talk - on the interaction between parasitic infections & HIV - in French, which was a little painful for me but I think went over well. It was intersting to review the topic in detail.

The congres was at the fanciest hotel in Haiti - perched on the top of a hill, the beautiful hotel was surrounded by lush gardens. Another world from the poverty below.