Lara Cooper, Author at Direct Relief Tue, 04 Nov 2025 15:27:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://i0.wp.com/www.directrelief.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/cropped-DirectRelief_Logomark_RGB.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Lara Cooper, Author at Direct Relief 32 32 142789926 Critical Medications, Supplies Arrive in Jamaica with Coordination from Direct Relief, Pan American Health Organization https://www.directrelief.org/2025/11/critical-medications-supplies-arrive-in-jamaica-with-coordination-from-direct-relief-pan-american-health-organization/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 15:27:41 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=90919 Essential medications and supplies needed to support patient care after devastating Hurricane Melissa arrived today in Jamaica, thanks to coordination between the Pan American Health Organization, or PAHO, and Direct Relief. Medical support arrived in Kingston, and the shipment contained a Direct Relief hurricane preparedness pack, a module containing critical medications, including antibiotics, wound care […]

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Essential medications and supplies needed to support patient care after devastating Hurricane Melissa arrived today in Jamaica, thanks to coordination between the Pan American Health Organization, or PAHO, and Direct Relief.

Medical support arrived in Kingston, and the shipment contained a Direct Relief hurricane preparedness pack, a module containing critical medications, including antibiotics, wound care supplies, chronic disease management medication, protective gear, and more. The packs are staged in hurricane-prone areas across the Caribbean and U.S. Gulf Coast to support patient care if supply lines are damaged.

The pack contains enough medications to sustain care for up to 3,000 patients for 30 days. Monday’s shipment also included 10 Direct Relief field medic packs to Jamaica to aid in response efforts. The packs are specifically designed to equip first responders with medical essentials for triage care.

The shipment will be distributed by Jamaica’s Ministry of Health, which supports public health facilities in Jamaica, including hospitals and primary care clinics.

The shipment was dispatched from PAHO’s regional strategic stockpile in Panama and will be distributed to medical facilities serving patients. The infusion of support from Direct Relief is one in a series of air support shipments that have arrived or will continue to arrive in the country to support health services after Hurricane Melissa devastated portions of the island last month.

Direct Relief has worked with the Pan American Health Organization since 2018, to provide regional support to medical organizations in the Americas, including Caribbean countries, and will continue to assist with emergency response efforts in the region.

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Direct Relief Commits $250,000, Opens Medical Inventory in Response to Hurricane Melissa’s Impacts in the Caribbean https://www.directrelief.org/2025/10/direct-relief-commits-250000-opens-medical-inventory-in-response-to-hurricane-melissas-impacts-in-the-caribbean/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 02:14:20 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=90580 Direct Relief today committed an initial $250,000 in financial support and offered up its entire medical inventory to health providers in the Caribbean in response to Hurricane Melissa. The Category 5 storm is churning through the Caribbean, with Jamaica and Cuba bracing for impact. Melissa’s ongoing threats include more than two feet of rain, dangerous […]

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Direct Relief today committed an initial $250,000 in financial support and offered up its entire medical inventory to health providers in the Caribbean in response to Hurricane Melissa.

The Category 5 storm is churning through the Caribbean, with Jamaica and Cuba bracing for impact. Melissa’s ongoing threats include more than two feet of rain, dangerous storm surge, and wind speeds of more than 150 miles per hour. The storm has already inundated areas of Haiti and the Dominican Republic with deadly flooding and landslides. 

Emergency Shipments En Route, Building on Long-Term Support

Direct Relief has extensive and long-lived partnerships in the Caribbean, with operational activity occurring on an ongoing basis, making the organization strongly positioned to scale up during disasters.

Over the past five years, Direct Relief has shipped more than 75 tons of medical aid to Jamaica, and recent shipments to the country included insulin and specialty respiratory medications.

Additional medical support is currently being prepared for shipment, including field medic packs to equip first responders with medical essentials and personal care products for displaced people.

Direct Relief has also invested in the country’s resilient power infrastructure, with $3 million in cash support going towards emergency preparedness projects to provide solar backup power for medical warehouses, generators to equip health centers on the island, and a primary healthcare mobile unit.

Medicines Currently Staged Throughout the Caribbean

Because hurricanes can cause extensive infrastructure damage to ports and roadways, leaving communities cut off for extended periods of time, Direct Relief operates an extensive hurricane preparedness program. The organization pre-positions caches of medicines and supplies in storm-prone communities, each containing enough medical aid to treat 3,000 people for one month, with the goal of equipping health providers on the ground until regional supply chains can be re-established.

There are currently six Direct Relief hurricane preparedness packs staged regionally for use in Hurricane Melissa-impacted areas: two in Haiti, two in the Dominican Republic, and two in Panama. Additional medical support staged in Panama with the Pan American Health Organization (the World Health Organization’s regional office in the Americas) is also ready for deployment if needed by regional health facilities.

Past Responses Build Trust, Strengthen Hurricane Melissa Efforts

Direct Relief has extensive experience responding to hurricanes in the region, including Hurricane Maria, which experienced widespread and long-lasting power outages long after the storm ended. The organization funneled more than $75 million in financial support and medical aid to strengthen Puerto Rico’s health system, and also provided resilient energy for much of the island’s critical healthcare infrastructure.  

The organization also maintains key relationships with regional partners, including the Office of Eastern Caribbean States, which represents 12 islands in the eastern Caribbean. Direct Relief is also coordinating with the Pan American Health Organization, which has coordinated shipments of medical aid into Cuba and other countries in the region.

Direct Relief is ready to respond as Melissa’s impacts, and the region’s medical needs after the storm, become clearer.

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With “Increasingly Dire” Forecast, Hurricane Melissa Intensifies, Putting the Caribbean on Alert https://www.directrelief.org/2025/10/with-increasingly-dire-forecast-hurricane-melissa-intensifies-putting-the-caribbean-on-alert/ Sun, 26 Oct 2025 06:15:33 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=90530 Hurricane Melissa strengthened into a Category Three storm on Saturday, and the slow-moving system has already inundated the region with rainfall ahead of its projected path tracking over or near Jamaica on Monday. The storm could reach Category Five strength by that time, and forecasters said some areas could receive up to 30 inches of […]

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Hurricane Melissa strengthened into a Category Three storm on Saturday, and the slow-moving system has already inundated the region with rainfall ahead of its projected path tracking over or near Jamaica on Monday.

The storm could reach Category Five strength by that time, and forecasters said some areas could receive up to 30 inches of rain, with the U.S. National Hurricane Center warning that the storm could have “increasingly dire” consequences for communities in its path.

Three people have been killed in Haiti from the storm’s impacts, and 15 people have been injured. Cuba is also expected to receive up to 18 inches of rain in the eastern areas of the island. Southern coastlines across Jamaica, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba are expected to be impacted by the storm surge.

Direct Relief Response

Direct Relief has regional staff based in the Caribbean responding to Hurricane Melissa, and the organization has been in close communication with health organizations in Jamaica, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic about health needs.

In the past 30 days alone, Direct Relief has delivered over $3.1 million in medical aid to the potentially impacted areas — ensuring that critical resources are already on the ground and ready for immediate use. The organization is continuing to fill requests as they become known.

For needs in Jamaica, Direct Relief has prepared a shipment of 100 field medic packs, filled with first aid items for triage care, at the request of Jamaica’s National Health Fund. Also ready for shipment are 250 requested personal care kits that include hygiene items for displaced people. Direct Relief has shared its medical inventory list with Jamaica’s Ministry of Health and is ready to deploy medical aid as needed.

Direct Relief has also coordinated with the Pan American Health Organization, or PAHO, to stage additional medicines in the region to backstop local supplies of medication. Two hurricane preparedness packs, with enough medications to treat 3,000 people for one month, are currently staged in Panama and ready to deploy to Jamaica as needed. Additional field medic packs are also ready to deploy to support first responders.

Direct Relief has worked to bolster Jamaica’s resilient power system, and after Hurricane Beryl’s impact in 2024, the organization donated 24 generators that have been installed at health centers across the southern coast and greater Kingston area, ensuring continuous healthcare services if power shuts down.

In Haiti, Direct Relief has pre-positioned two hurricane preparedness packs, one with Hope For Haiti in Les Cayes, a city in the southwestern peninsula of Haiti, and a second with PAHO, which has an emergency response team that works directly with Haiti’s Ministry of Health to supporting local public hospitals.

In the Dominican Republic, Direct Relief has prepositioned two hurricane preparedness packs, and the country’s national emergency response agency, Defensa Civil, recently received 108 emergency medical backpacks and 300 emergency family hygiene kits.

Direct Relief has a long history of responding to storms in the Caribbean, including Hurricanes Matthew, Dorian, Maria, Fiona, and Beryl, and has supported medical facilities throughout the region during these disasters as well as on an ongoing basis.

Direct Relief will continue to respond to medical needs throughout the week as Hurricane Melissa’s impacts become known.

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Direct Relief Dispatches Medical Aid, $50,000 in Emergency Funds for Typhoon-Devastated Communities in Alaska https://www.directrelief.org/2025/10/direct-relief-dispatches-medical-aid-50000-in-emergency-funds-for-typhoon-devastated-communities-in-alaska/ Wed, 15 Oct 2025 22:12:14 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=90284 In response to back-to-back storms spurred by Typhoon Halong in western Alaska, Direct Relief is dispatching medical and financial support to impacted communities in the state, where more than 1,000 people have been displaced. Winds of more than 100 miles per hour ripped homes from their foundations, and record tidal surges inundated communities in the […]

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In response to back-to-back storms spurred by Typhoon Halong in western Alaska, Direct Relief is dispatching medical and financial support to impacted communities in the state, where more than 1,000 people have been displaced.

Winds of more than 100 miles per hour ripped homes from their foundations, and record tidal surges inundated communities in the western part of the state on Sunday. At least one person has died as a result of the floods, and two remain missing, according to state agencies. Many people are sheltering in local schools or community centers, and critical infrastructure has been damaged.

The storm’s impacts were most significant in low-lying areas of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta region in western Alaska, including the communities of Kwigillingok, Kipnuk, and Napakiak. The remote area has limited road access, making emergency response and aid distribution challenging. Many communities can only be reached by boat or plane, and a critical airport in the community of Kipnuk has sustained damage. 

Direct Relief’s Response

Flooding in western Alaska has prompted more than 1,000 people to evacuate. (Photo by the Alaska Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management)

Direct Relief has been in communication with local healthcare providers and tribal organizations across the state about ongoing medical requests.

On Wednesday, the organization shipped emergency medical aid requested by the Alaska Native Heritage Center, or ANHC, located in Anchorage. A part of a statewide coalition of organizations, ANHC is working to coordinate relief provisions to directly impacted individuals. The organization is coordinating material aid to areas of greatest need, providing financial assistance to displaced families, and coordinating transportation of supplies to Southwest Alaska. In the past, ANHC provided donations to those impacted by Typhoon Merbok in 2022 and community preparedness while monitoring volcanic activity from Mount Spurr earlier this year.

The shipment to ANHC included field medic packs, which contain first aid essentials for triage care outside of clinic walls and are used by healthcare providers and first responders in disaster settings, including basic medical needs in shelters.

Direct Relief is also preparing to ship requested personal care items, including soap, shampoo, and dental hygiene products for people who have been displaced by the storm. ANHC will also receive $50,000 to support emergency response costs.

Direct Relief has provided more than $5 million in medical and financial support to organizations across the state since 2008, and has provided support after other extreme weather events in the region, including 2022’s Typhoon Merbok, which impacted western Alaska.

The organization continues to reach out and offer assistance to organizations supporting the impacted region and will continue to respond to immediate and long-term needs as they become known.

Personal care products for displaced people are staged at Direct Relief’s warehouse for departure to Alaska this week as part of ongoing flood response efforts. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

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“Together, We Are Unstoppable”: Direct Relief CEO Amy Weaver Speaks to Health Center Leaders in Chicago https://www.directrelief.org/2025/08/together-we-are-unstoppable-direct-relief-ceo-amy-weaver-speaks-to-health-center-leaders-in-chicago/ Tue, 19 Aug 2025 10:47:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=89298 Thousands of health center leaders from across the United States gathered this week to talk about the challenges and opportunities facing the organizations that serve more than 34 million people with essential health services. The CHI Community Health Conference and Expo was the nation’s largest network of primary care providers made up of community health […]

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Thousands of health center leaders from across the United States gathered this week to talk about the challenges and opportunities facing the organizations that serve more than 34 million people with essential health services.

The CHI Community Health Conference and Expo was the nation’s largest network of primary care providers made up of community health centers, or CHCs, and was hosted by the National Association of Community Health Centers, or NACHC.

These health centers are currently serving a record-breaking number of patients – more than ever in their 60-year history. Many health center patients lack insurance or are underinsured, and can seek care at health centers, regardless of ability to pay. Community health centers are often the first and only point of care for millions in underserved areas, and also play a critical role during disasters, often acting as first responders during times of crisis.

The conference brought together nearly 3,000 CHC leaders from across the nation alongside more than 180 exhibitors representing the full healthcare spectrum. Sessions covered a wide array of topics, including food as medicine initiatives and chronic disease management. Strategic sessions also addressed the safe and responsible integration of artificial intelligence into clinical practice.

NACHC CEO Dr. Kyu Rhee kicked off the general session on Monday morning, with a surprise visit from Sesame Street’s Cookie Monster, to talk about the importance of food as medicine and the key role health centers play in the nation’s primary care health system.

Rhee also spoke about the important role health centers play during disasters and other emergencies. Rhee spoke about visiting a health center in Maui impacted by the 2023 Lahaina wildfires, and how staff immediately responded to those fires, and are still responding two years later, supporting patients with post-traumatic stress and ongoing health needs.

“[Health centers] are the first, and the last, responders, and Direct Relief has been a partner of choice to support this work,” Rhee said. “They work to help people recover from disasters and improve the quality of their lives.”

Rhee introduced Direct Relief CEO Amy Weaver, who thanked health centers and their staff for the “vital, complex, and often unsung work that you do every single day.”

During the time Direct Relief has supported health centers during disasters, as well as on an ongoing basis, “we’ve seen your work up close. We’ve seen your patients’ A1C levels drop. We’ve met patients whose lives turned around because of your HIV treatment, your substance use recovery programs, your trauma care. We’ve seen your cooking classes, the fresh produce, the trust you build every day,” she said.

Health centers have filled a vital role in the nation’s safety net since the civil rights era, pairing medical care with deep understanding. “You are more vital than ever to Direct Relief’s mission of increasing health for all people – regardless of religion, politics, or ability to pay,” she said.

Weaver’s remarks can be found here.

Direct Relief’s support of health centers in the United States dates back to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, when Direct Relief worked to reach out to health centers in impacted communities and backstop them with critical medical support. Up to that time, Direct Relief’s support had primarily focused on international shipments of medication, but the need in the U.S., post-Katrina, called for a new strategy.

“What Direct Relief realized – rather painfully – at that moment was that we could send medicine to Liberia, but we didn’t have the expertise or licensing to send medicine to Louisiana,” she said.

That changed with a call to the National Association of Community Health Centers, Weaver said, which provided guidance and connected Direct Relief with local health centers in the impacted areas. “We witnessed these community health centers – along with free clinics, charitable pharmacies, and volunteer doctors and nurses sleeping in churches – step up in the weeks afterward to care for people who’d lost their homes and their medicines,” she said.

At that time, Direct Relief had never responded to a domestic disaster on a large scale. But within six months, the organization had provided more than $50 million in medical aid and funding assistance to health centers in the Gulf Coast, establishing a network of partners in the region. That move inspired Direct Relief to pivot its focus from being solely international to becoming the largest charitable medicines program in the United States, supporting all 50 states and four U.S. territories.

Since that time, Direct Relief has shipped more than $1 billion wholesale in medical aid to community health center partners, and over 100,000 deliveries – all of it completely free of cost. The organization has also awarded more than $128 million in funding to over 600 health centers to support community health, access, resilient power, mobile health, and disaster response.

As health centers work to continue to serve patients across the U.S., Weaver encouraged them to keep going in that spirit of service and deep knowledge of their own communities.

“You’re local experts, but you have universal wisdom to share,” she said. “And together, we are unstoppable.”

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Insulin Arrives in Yemen, Cholera Treatments Depart for Angola, and More https://www.directrelief.org/2025/07/insulin-arrives-in-yemen-cholera-treatment-departs-for-angola-and-more/ Fri, 04 Jul 2025 10:42:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=87973 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 1,026 shipments of requested medical aid to 51 U.S. states and territories and 24 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 8.5 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included cardiovascular medications, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, pharmaceutical-grade refrigeration units, surgical supplies, personal protective equipment, […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 1,026 shipments of requested medical aid to 51 U.S. states and territories and 24 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 8.5 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included cardiovascular medications, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, pharmaceutical-grade refrigeration units, surgical supplies, personal protective equipment, and more.

Insulin Arrives in Yemen

Insulin and other medical aid from Direct Relief recently arrived in Yemen to support health services in the country.

The temperature-controlled shipment was shipped in coordination with Yemen Aid, which supports Yemen’s health sector with the distribution of medical aid to more than 50 hospitals, mobile clinics, ambulance services, a breast cancer diagnosis center, and more.

Direct Relief has provided more than $14 million in medical support to health organizations in Yemen since 2009.

Cholera Treatment Supplies, Medication Depart for Angola

Cholera treatment supplies and medications are packed for departure to Angola on July 2, 2025. The country is experiencing an outbreak of the disease and the supplies will go to support patients with cholera, including pregnant women and young children who may be especially vulnerable to rapid dehydration. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

Cholera treatment medicines and supplies departed for Angola this week to support health providers working to fight cholera in the country.

Medical aid, including oral rehydration salts, antibiotics, water purification tablets, protective gear, and more, is en route to Hospital Materno Infantil Azancot de Menezes in Luanda, Angola. The 10-floor hospital is one of the main referral hospitals for maternal, neonatal and child health care in Angola.

Angola has been experiencing a severe outbreak of cholera, with over 20,000 cases and over 600 deaths reported in 2025. As Luanda is an outbreak hotspot, the hospital has been inundated with hundreds of pregnant mothers and children infected with cholera. Staff plan to use this shipment of Direct Relief medical aid to establish cholera treatment units. Hospital staff also intend to partner with Luanda’s general hospital to jointly address the cholera outbreak more broadly.

Dr. Faith Adole of U-Vol Foundation Visits Direct Relief

Dr. Faith Adole, founder of the U-VOL Foundation, speaks at Direct Relief on July 2, 2025. Adole’s foundation focuses on health and Direct Relief supported the organization with Midwife Kits to equip health providers in Nigeria. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

Dr. Faith Adole, Founder & President of the U-VOL Foundation, visited Direct Relief this week to lead a conversation on improving access to healthcare, supporting maternal health, and building stronger community-based health programs.

U-VOL is a nonprofit that provides free medical care, health education, and clean water and sanitation support to underserved communities in the U.S. and around the world. Under Dr. Adole’s leadership, the organization focuses on long-term, locally led solutions that prioritize compassion, dignity, and trust.

Direct Relief has supported U-VOL by providing medical supplies, including midwife kits to health providers in Nigeria working to lower maternal mortality in the country.

Recently, healthcare providers at St. Charles Hospital and Maternity in Nigeria, completed the pilot phase of the ValueHer Initiative, hosted by the U-VOL Foundation. Nineteen healthcare professionals participated in this training, which entailed intensive hands-on training sessions in advanced maternal and neonatal care. (Photos by U-VOL Foundation)

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 987 shipments containing 1.6 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Samaritans Touch Care Center, Florida
  • Centro de Diagnostico y Tratamiento CDT Culebra, Puerto Rico
  • Steve Rummler HOPE Network, Minnesota
  • Open Door Health Center, Florida
  • Lake Superior Community Health Center, Minnesota
  • Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Oklahoma
  • The Agape Clinic, Texas
  • Findley Foundation Inc. dba Findley Medical Clinic, Wisconsin
  • Santa Clara County Better Health Pharmacy, California
  • The Hearts and Hands Clinic, Inc., Georgia

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 6.9 million defined daily doses of medication, totaling 86,999 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Ukraine
  • Sudan
  • Dominican Republic
  • Peru
  • Nepal
  • Pakistan
  • Angola
  • Jordan

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 15.2K shipments to 2,157 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 80 countries. These shipments included 132.6 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $1.1 billion wholesale, totaling 2.3 million lbs.

In the News

GoFundMe Is Refurbishing a Lesser-Known Financial Tool in a Bid to Supercharge Everyday Giving – Associated Press

Agencies Prep for Next Big Disaster as Santa Barbara Marks Earthquake Centennial – KEYT

Direct Relief Receives Global Honor from International Council of Nurses and Commits $100,000 to Support Nurses in Conflict Zones – International Council of Nurses

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Direct Relief Equips First Responders as Wildfires Blaze in Turkey https://www.directrelief.org/2025/06/direct-relief-equips-first-responders-as-wildfires-blaze-in-turkey/ Mon, 30 Jun 2025 21:03:40 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=88012 More than 50,000 people have been evacuated across five regions in Turkey due to wildfires, exacerbated by dry conditions and a heat wave blanketing multiple countries this week. Fires are impacting Izmir, where most of the evacuations have occurred, but also in other areas, including Antakya, which was severely impacted by the devastating 2023 earthquakes […]

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More than 50,000 people have been evacuated across five regions in Turkey due to wildfires, exacerbated by dry conditions and a heat wave blanketing multiple countries this week.

Fires are impacting Izmir, where most of the evacuations have occurred, but also in other areas, including Antakya, which was severely impacted by the devastating 2023 earthquakes that killed more than 50,000 people in Turkey and northern Syria, damaged infrastructure, and displaced thousands.

Hot and dry conditions are exacerbating wildfires, which often bring about a host of health conditions. Respiratory inflammation from particulates in the air can be particularly harmful for older adults, children, and people with underlying health issues. Conditions like asthma and COPD can also worsen with poor air quality, and health risks often mount for people evacuated from their homes, who may be cut off from essential medications needed to manage their health.

Direct Relief’s Response

Medical aid, including 108 field medic packs to equip first responders in Turkey, is staged for departure on June 30, 2025. The country is experiencing wildfires, which have displaced at least 50,000 people. (Direct Relief photo)

Direct Relief has worked extensively in Turkey, including the 2023 earthquake response, and has provided more than $132 million in medical support to health-focused organizations in the country since 2015. The organization has provided more than $6 million in financial support to support emergency response and recovery in the country.

In response to current wildfires in Turkey, Direct Relief field medic packs, equipped with medical essentials for triage care outside of clinic walls, have been dispatched to Hatay, Manisa, and Izmir.

The packs are being distributed with the support of the group Needs Map. Direct Relief worked with AFAD, the Turkish Disaster and Emergency Management Authority, in advance of fire season to stage these packs for deployment when first responders need them most. Another shipment of 108 medical backpacks was staged for departure this week to support response efforts.

Direct Relief has medical staff in country coordinating with local health authorities. The organization will continue to respond to medical requests as they become known.

Direct Relief-donated field medic packs equipped staff at a field hospital in İskenderun, Turkey, on May 6, 2023, post-earthquake. The packs are again being used for disaster response, this time for wildfires burning in the country. (Photo by Francesca Volpi for Direct Relief)

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Connecting Lakota Youth to Culture in South Dakota https://www.directrelief.org/2025/06/connecting-lakota-youth-to-culture-in-south-dakota/ Mon, 23 Jun 2025 09:45:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=87900 In the small community of Eagle Butte, South Dakota, children come and go from a bustling community center that serves as a safe space for them to play, connect with each other, and their Lakota culture. The activity is all part of the Cheyenne River Youth Project, which serves Lakota youth ages 4-18 on the […]

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In the small community of Eagle Butte, South Dakota, children come and go from a bustling community center that serves as a safe space for them to play, connect with each other, and their Lakota culture.

The activity is all part of the Cheyenne River Youth Project, which serves Lakota youth ages 4-18 on the Cheyenne River Sioux reservation in South Dakota.  The Cheyenne River reservation encompasses more than 3 million rural acres in the high plains of north central South Dakota.  The reservation is home to four of the seven bands of Lakota: Mnicoujou, O’ohenumpa, Itazipco, and Siha Sapa. Over 8,500 individuals live in 14 communities located on the reservation. 

Eagle Butte, where the organization is located, is the largest community with more than 1,300 people. The work of the Cheyenne River Youth Project aims to build strong futures for kids through programming that focuses on the critical issues of leadership, food sovereignty, Native wellness, and arts and culture. 

“In Eagle Butte, there’s not a lot happening. The kids needed something to do,” said Julie Garreau, CEO of the Cheyenne River Youth Project.

The Cheyenne River Youth Project was founded 35 years ago to respond to the Cheyenne River Lakota Sioux community’s need for more services that supported children and their families.  The programming at the center also addresses the effects of intergenerational trauma on Lakota youth rooted in hundreds of years of oppression and poverty. 

By connecting kids to their culture, including traditional foods and farming practices as well as art and cultural activities, the organization is the largest and most utilized afterschool program on the reservation.

Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity supported the Cheyenne River Youth Project with a $200,000 grant.

“We often say that ‘CRYP is the anti-boarding school.’ We are taking back our culture,” she said.
“What we can hope to do is help shape the lives of kids by giving them some ideas to make different choices.”

This video was directed, produced, and edited by Oliver Riley-Smith Cinematography.

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Medicines for Haiti, 12 More Countries, Depart from Direct Relief https://www.directrelief.org/2025/06/medicines-for-haiti-12-other-countries-depart-from-direct-relief-this-week/ Fri, 06 Jun 2025 17:13:43 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=87701 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 644 shipments of requested medical aid to 47 U.S. states and territories and 13 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 6.2 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included therapies for cancer treatment, rare disease management, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, personal protective equipment, […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 644 shipments of requested medical aid to 47 U.S. states and territories and 13 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 6.2 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included therapies for cancer treatment, rare disease management, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, personal protective equipment, and more.

Supporting Haiti Hospitals

Health staff at Hospital Albert Schweitzer. (Courtesy photo)

Direct Relief recently dispatched a shipment of essential medical aid to support healthcare in Haiti. Hospital Albert Schweitzer operates a 200-bed hospital in the Artibonite Valley of central Haiti. The hospital is the only hospital for more than 600 square miles and serves a population of more than 350,000 people. The hospital offers vulnerable patients specialized care, including surgeries, high-risk obstetrics, and a dedicated neonatal ward for premature and sick infants.

HAS also sponsors water and sanitation projects, operates community clinics, and sends trained community health workers to remote mountainous areas with vaccines, malnutrition screening tools, and other basic health services.

Since 2010, Direct Relief has provided the hospital with more than $16.5 million in medical aid. Recent support to the hospital included antibiotics, respiratory medications, diabetes treatment therapies, oral rehydration salts, water purification tablets, wound care and surgical supplies, and more. The hospital continues serving patients despite civil unrest in the country. The organization’s leadership team visited Direct Relief in May 2025 to strategize around ongoing support for the group’s medical work in Haiti.

Medical Aid to Ukraine

Medical support arrived recently in Ukraine from Direct Relief. (Courtesy photo)

Direct Relief-provided medical aid continues to reach health organizations in Ukraine administering care.

Recently, medical support was delivered throughout the Poltava region of Ukraine to Kozelshina and Kremenchuk, focusing on institutions that provide comprehensive medical care to their patients. Working with NGO Hospitable Hut in Ukraine, essential medicines and personal care products were distributed.

Direct Relief has provided more than $1.8 billion in medical support for Ukraine relief since February 2022.

Supporting Children in Turkey, Post-Earthquake

Children enjoy an arts workshop at the INSEV Lemon Tree Center, which supports children impacted by the 2023 earthquakes. (Courtesy photo)

Children gather at INSEV’s Lemon Tree Mobile Mental Health and Psychosocial Services Unit for Children in Hatay, Turkey. Direct Relief has supported INSEV with financial assistance to further its mission of expanding services for children impacted by the 2023 earthquakes. Recently, volunteer instructor Gizem Yıldız from Atay Aknehir Ronya Art Cooperative held a drama workshop for children living in transitional housing, post-earthquake.

INSEV is an NGO based in Istanbul and has been working on initiatives to support access to healthcare in Hatay, an area affected by the earthquakes. The organization has been supporting children since the early days after the earthquakes in Hatay, including with mental health and psychosocial services for young people.

Direct Relief has provided more than $208 million in medical aid in response to the 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquake, as well as more than $10 million in financial support to organizations, including INSEV, focused on earthquake recovery.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 617 shipments containing 801,735 doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Ironbound Community Health Center, Inc., New Jersey
  • Findley Foundation Inc dba Findley Medical Clinic, Wisconsin
  • Faith Family Medical Clinic, Tennessee
  • ODA Primary Care Health Center, New York
  • The Agape Clinic, Texas
  • Street Outreach Teams, Michigan
  • Tree Of Life Healthcare, Georgia
  • Community Volunteers in Medicine, Pennsylvania

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 1.8 million defined daily doses of medication, totaling 84,539 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Ukraine
  • Paraguay
  • Chad
  • Ghana
  • Haiti
  • Ethiopia
  • Malawi
  • Dominican Republic

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 12.6K shipments to 2,018 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 78 countries. These shipments included 114.5 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $979.1 million wholesale, totaling 2.0 million lbs.

In the News

How This Atty Used Her Law Degree To Go From CLO To CEO – Law 360

Direct Relief Orange Is the New Black: Amy Weaver Takes the Helm of Santa Barbara Nonprofit – Santa Barbara Independent

Amy Weaver Is Ready to Helm Direct Relief – Pacific Coast Business Times

Direct Relief Completes Medical Oxygen Projects in Libya and Colombia – Gasworld

School of Medicine Celebrates One-of-A-Kind Class – UC San Diego Today

The post Medicines for Haiti, 12 More Countries, Depart from Direct Relief appeared first on Direct Relief.

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Supporting Moms and Babies in Bangladesh During the Weeks Before and After Birth https://www.directrelief.org/2025/04/supporting-moms-and-babies-in-bangladesh-during-the-weeks-before-and-after-birth/ Fri, 25 Apr 2025 19:15:33 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=86654 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 416 shipments of requested medical aid to 38 U.S. states and territories and 15 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 4.3 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included medications for rare disease management, surgical supplies, diabetes management medications, personal protective equipment, and […]

The post Supporting Moms and Babies in Bangladesh During the Weeks Before and After Birth appeared first on Direct Relief.

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 416 shipments of requested medical aid to 38 U.S. states and territories and 15 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 4.3 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included medications for rare disease management, surgical supplies, diabetes management medications, personal protective equipment, and more.

Perinatal Kits Reach Bangladesh

HOPE Hospital midwives attend to a new mom and baby. (Courtesy photo)

Medications and supplies to treat conditions that put mothers and babies most at risk in the weeks before or after labor and delivery arrived at a critical hospital in Bangladesh this week.

Hope Foundation Hospital for Women and Children of Bangladesh received 20 Perinatal Health Kits from Direct Relief. The kits contain medications and supplies to treat conditions that can occur with life-threatening impacts on women and newborns, including preeclampsia/eclampsia, prevention of premature birth, infection, and respiratory distress. The kits contain enough medications and supplies to treat 1,000 cases of each indication.

Hope Hospital, which provides critical patient care, including labor and delivery services, to the surrounding community as well as women needing care from the nearby Rohingya refugee settlement in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh.

Twenty kits arrived at the HOPE Foundation Hospital to support care for mothers and babies at risk of conditions that can become life-threatening without intervention. (Courtesy photo)

The hospital is one of five pilot sites for the Perinatal Health Kits, which were designed in collaboration with and endorsed by the International Confederation of Midwives. The kits have also been sent to health providers in Somaliland, Uganda, and Malawi, with an additional shipment in process to Tanzania.

Based on feedback from providers, Direct Relief will continue to refine the kits and the items included.

The Perinatal Health Kits complement Direct Relief’s Midwife Kit, which was also developed with and endorsed by ICM. The Midwife Kits contain medical essentials needed for safe births and have been deployed to 35 countries to support health providers.

Lights On in West AfricaN Hospital

A physician examines a patient at F.J. Grante Memorial Hospital in Greenville, Liberia. (Courtesy photo)

In rural Liberia where power isn’t a given and hospital staff have had to treat patients by the light of only a cell phone during an outage, the lights are now on.

The FJ Grante Hospital, located in Greenville, Liberia, is now online with electrification and lighting, allowing the facility to harness the power of the sun and be energy resilient. The facility, which provides emergency surgeries and treatment to the southeast region of the country, depended on diesel generators formerly to power lights and equipment. The area lacks an electrical grid, and the cost and availability of diesel limited power access, with life-impacting consequences.

The solar installation at the hospital is part of the larger Africa Infrastructure Relief and Support, or AIRS, project — a Society of Critical Care Medicine Collaboration with the Johns Hopkins Global Alliance of Perioperative Professionals and the Institute of Global Perioperative Care.

Through AIRS, Direct Relief is funding reliable power and medical oxygen projects in Sierra Leone, the Gambia, and Liberia, with a $5.5 million grant. A solar installation and battery backup at the hospital are creating resilient power for medical operations there, and a medical oxygen plant at the site is expected to come online shortly.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 387 shipments containing 2.1 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • All For Health, Health For All, California
  • PanCare of Florida, Inc. Malone, Florida
  • Cabell-Huntington Health Department, West Virginia
  • Community Family Clinic, Idaho
  • University Community Health Services d.b.a. Connectus Health, Tennessee
  • Unity Shoppe, California
  • Neighborhood Health Services, Tennessee
  • Pasadena Senior Center, California
  • Bridgeville Health Center, Pennsylvania
  • Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Oklahoma

Around the World

Diabetes treatment medications and supplies are packed at Direct Relief’s medical distribution warehouse on April 24, 2025. The shipment will support diabetes treatment in Ethiopia. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 2.2 million defined daily doses of medication, totaling 54,434 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Ukraine
  • Tanzania
  • Mali
  • Syria
  • El Salvador
  • Tunisia
  • Ghana
  • Colombia

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 9,119 shipments to 1,782 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 74 countries. These shipments included 89.6 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $743.3 million wholesale, totaling 1.5 million lbs.

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Supporting Women’s Health with Life-Changing Surgeries, Continued Myanmar Earthquake Response, and More https://www.directrelief.org/2025/04/supporting-womens-health-with-life-changing-surgeries-continued-myanmar-earthquake-response-and-more/ Fri, 18 Apr 2025 19:16:47 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=86562 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 476 shipments of requested medical aid to 46 U.S. states and territories and nine countries worldwide. The shipments contained 4.3 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included medications for breast cancer treatment, surgical supplies, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, refrigerators and cold […]

The post Supporting Women’s Health with Life-Changing Surgeries, Continued Myanmar Earthquake Response, and More appeared first on Direct Relief.

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 476 shipments of requested medical aid to 46 U.S. states and territories and nine countries worldwide. The shipments contained 4.3 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included medications for breast cancer treatment, surgical supplies, antibiotics, diabetes management medications, refrigerators and cold storage for temperature-sensitive medications, personal protective equipment, cancer treatment therapies, and more.

Essential Surgical Supplies Arrive in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Surgical supplies for women with fistula arrive at a key hospital in the Democratic Republic of Congo. (Courtesy photo)

A critical shipment of surgical supplies to support birth injury repair arrived at a hospital in the Democratic Republic of Congo this week.

Eight fistula repair modules, donated by Direct Relief, arrived in Goma, DRC, this week, and contain enough surgical supplies and medical consumables for 400 fistula repair surgeries. Fistula can occur during or after childbirth if labor is obstructed, damaging tissue and causing long-term impacts for women.

The shipment went to support the work of HEAL Africa, which operates a 197-bed tertiary referral hospital, one of only three referral hospitals in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The facility provides general surgery, orthopedics, obstetrics and gynecology (including fistula repair), pediatrics, and internal medicine. It also serves as a center for healthcare and research, and for training doctors and healthcare professionals.

The hospital has been serving an influx of patients seeking care due to displacement and conflict in the region. Direct Relief has been supporting several healthcare organizations in the region with medical aid transported by roadway since the Goma International Airport remains closed due to the conflict.

Response to Deadly Myanmar Earthquake Continues

An emergency shipment containing antibiotics, diabetes medications and diagnostic supplies, personal care items, and field medic packs for first responders are staged on April 17, 2025, for departure to Myanmar. The medical aid was requested by Community Partners International, which is responding to medical needs resulting from the major earthquake that rattled the region in March 2025. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

Support continues for areas impacted in Southeast Asia by the devastating 7.7-magnitude earthquake that reverberated through the region, with particularly devastating impacts in Myanmar. More than 200,000 people were displaced as a result, and the AHA Center has reported 3,700 confirmed fatalities from the earthquake, and more than 4,800 injuries.

In response, Direct Relief issued a $50,000 emergency support grant to Community Partners International, or CPI, for search and rescue and mobile health programming in the earthquake’s aftermath. Direct Relief is also preparing a medical aid shipment of requested emergency medicines, including antibiotics, diabetes medications, and diagnostic supplies, hygiene items, and field medic packs filled with triage essentials for CPI’s medical work in Myanmar.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 465 shipments containing 2.3 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Welvista, South Carolina
  • NC MedAssist, North Carolina
  • St. Vincent de Paul Pharmacy – Dallas, Texas
  • CommunityHealth, Illinois
  • PanCare of Florida, Inc. Malone, Florida
  • Volunteers in Medicine Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
  • Lloyd F. Moss Free Clinic Pharmacy, Virginia
  • St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Clearwater Free Clinic, Florida
  • Asociación Puertorriqueña Probienestar De Las Familias, Profamilias, Puerto Rico

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 2 million defined daily doses of medication, totaling 25,034 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Egypt
  • Nepal
  • Ethiopia
  • Senegal
  • Nigeria
  • Djibouti
  • Ghana
  • The Democratic Republic of Congo

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 8,703 shipments to 1,755 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 71 countries. These shipments included 85.3 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $684.6 million wholesale, totaling 1.4 million lbs.

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Medical Services Reach Patients in Peru, Plus Medications Shipped to 15 Countries This Week https://www.directrelief.org/2025/04/medical-services-reach-patients-in-peru-plus-medications-shipped-to-15-countries-this-week/ Fri, 04 Apr 2025 19:27:27 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=86208 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 480 shipments of requested medical aid to 39 U.S. states and territories and 15 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 2.7 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included cancer treatment therapies, diabetes management medications, refrigerators and cold storage for temperature-sensitive medications, personal […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 480 shipments of requested medical aid to 39 U.S. states and territories and 15 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 2.7 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included cancer treatment therapies, diabetes management medications, refrigerators and cold storage for temperature-sensitive medications, personal protective equipment, rare disease therapies, and more.

This week, Direct Relief provided financial support for multiple emergencies, including the wildfires in South Korea and the earthquake in Southeast Asia.

Supporting Medical Services in Peru

Direct Relief-donated medical aid recently supported medical services in coastal Peru during a two-day medical clinic. Vida Peru, a nonprofit focused on health support in the country, held a medical campaign in Paracas, Peru.

The clinic was held inside a local school and offered patients services in pediatrics, dentistry, optometry, psychology, ultrasound services, gynecology, dermatology, general medicine, and pharmacy access. The clinic treated numerous patients in a community with limited resources.

Direct Relief has provided Vida Peru with $95 million in medical aid since 2011.

Expanding Mental Health Services in Puerto Rico

Direct Relief staff and leaders from Carlos Albizu University gathered to inaugurate a new mobile clinic that will provide mental health services to underserved communities in Puerto Rico. (Direct Relief photo)

A new mobile unit will help expand mental health services in Puerto Rico communities and train mental health providers.

Direct Relief staff and local leaders gathered last week to inaugurate a new mobile unit at Carlos Albizu University. The institution provides education focused on psychology and speech and language therapy, including doctoral degrees in clinical psychology and master’s degrees in speech-language pathology.

The university also has community clinics in San Juan, Comerío, and Caguas, where they provide mental health services at low cost for patients while also serving as a training facility for doctoral students enrolled in the PhD and PsyD programs. The mobile unit will strengthen these existing services by mobilizing mental health professionals and providing upcoming professionals with hands-on experience in a community setting.

Services will include speech and language therapy, psychological evaluations, therapeutic interventions, and emotional support to promote the well-being of individuals who face crises, and psychosocial challenges. The mobile unit will also be a resource during emergencies to facilitate the delivery of mental health services in affected areas.

During Hurricane María, the 2020 earthquakes in the southern region, and Hurricane Fiona, the students from Carlos Albizu University responded to provide psychological services to affected communities, and will be equipped to respond to future emergencies with the mobile unit.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 457 shipments containing 1.2 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Findley Foundation Inc dba Findley Medical Clinic, Wisconsin
  • Community Helping Hands Clinic, Georgia
  • Faith Family Medical Clinic, Tennessee
  • Tree Of Life Healthcare, Georgia
  • Los Angeles County Public Health, California
  • Pocatello Free Clinic, Idaho
  • Mary’s Center for Maternal and Child Care, Inc., District of Columbia
  • Lifecycles Health Services, Inc., New Jersey
  • All For Health, Health For All, California
  • Gulf Coast Health Center, Texas

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 1.5 million defined daily doses of medication totaling 51,807 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Armenia
  • Ukraine
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Ethiopia
  • Jordan
  • India
  • Liberia
  • Uganda
A medical shipment, including cancer treatment therapies, departed for Haiti on March 27, 2025. The shipment will support medical services by Partners in Health in Haiti. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 7,799 shipments to 1,626 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 70 countries. These shipments included 76.4 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $575.1 million wholesale, totaling 1.3 million lbs.

In the News

Direct Relief Appoints Amy Weaver as Next CEO – The Software Report

Direct Relief joins Emergency Response Efforts to Provide Aid to Myanmar – KEYT

Inauguran la Primera Unidad Móvil de la Clínica de la Albizu para Ofrecer Servicios de Salud Mental – El Nuevo Dia

Universidad Albizu Inaugura Unidad Móvil – Primera Hora

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Supporting Safe Births in Nigeria, Plus Medical Aid Departs to 12 Countries https://www.directrelief.org/2025/03/supporting-safe-births-in-nigeria-plus-medical-aid-departs-to-12-countries/ Fri, 21 Mar 2025 15:12:48 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=86124 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 682 shipments of requested medical aid to 46 U.S. states and territories and 12 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 3.5 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included diabetes management medications, power generators, surgical supplies, rare disease therapies, and more. Training, Equipping […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 682 shipments of requested medical aid to 46 U.S. states and territories and 12 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 3.5 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included diabetes management medications, power generators, surgical supplies, rare disease therapies, and more.

Training, Equipping Health Workers for Safe Births in Nigeria

Health providers in Nigeria recently received advanced training on maternal and neonatal care, as well as supplies to facilitate safe births. Nineteen health professionals at St. Charles Hospital and Maternity Ward in Adoka, Nigeria, completed a training conducted by the U-VOL Foundation, which supports the ongoing education of healthcare workers, particularly in rural settings.

Nigeria has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world, according to the World Health Organization. The recent training included hands-on sessions focused on advanced maternal and neonatal care. From neonatal resuscitation to managing obstetric emergencies and introducing necessary supplies to ensure safe deliveries, the event strengthened the skills of midwives, nurses, community health workers, and doctors to improve birth outcomes and save lives.

Direct Relief supported the training by donating midwife kits, each containing items to support up to 50 facility-based births. This shipment will equip local providers with the essential tools needed for safe and high-quality maternal care.

Critical Cancer Therapies Arrive in Yemen

Cancer treatment therapies, donated by Direct Relief, arrive in Yemen. The shipment of medications, coordinated by YemenAid, will be distributed to health facilities across the country. (Courtesy photo)

Cancer therapies and other medical support arrived in Yemen recently to support health services in the country. Direct Relief coordinated the shipment with YemenAid, a nonprofit focused on supporting Yemen’s health sector across the country, which includes medical aid distribution to local health facilities, operation of a breast cancer diagnosis center, ambulance services program, and more. The shipment included medications for the treatment of breast cancer.

Direct Relief has supported Yemen Aid with $3.9 million worth of medical support since 2021.

Insulin Reaches Free Clinic in Arkansas

On March 18. 2025, temperature-sensitive medication departs for Harmony Health Clinic in Little Rock, Arkansas. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

One of many shipments departing for U.S. health organizations this week included temperature-sensitive diabetes management medications bound for a free clinic in Little Rock, Arkansas, providing basic medical care for uninsured people.

Harmony Health Clinic provides access to quality medical care at no cost to patients living in Central Arkansas in a private, community-based clinic, staffed by volunteer professionals. This week, a shipment of insulin and other diabetes therapies departed for the clinic to support health services. The clinic received medications through Direct Relief’s ReplenishRx program, which provides free medicine for people lacking health insurance and with household income at or below 300% of the Federal poverty line.

The program helps clinics and charitable pharmacies provide a steady supply of vital medicine to patients lacking insurance, without the need to apply to individual Patient Assistance Programs, or PAPs, offered by pharmaceutical companies.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 658 shipments containing 2.5 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Welvista, South Carolina
  • NC MedAssist, North Carolina
  • St. Vincent de Paul Pharmacy – Dallas, Texas
  • CommunityHealth, Illinois
  • Lloyd F. Moss Free Clinic Pharmacy, Virginia
  • Volunteers in Medicine Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
  • St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Shackelford County Community, Texas
  • Icna Relief USA Programs Inc dba Shifa Free Clinic, South Carolina
  • NOVA ScriptsCentral Inc Pharmacy, Virginia

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 1 million defined daily doses of medication totaling 41,560 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Tunisia
  • Uganda
  • El Salvador
  • The Gambia
  • Tanzania
  • India
  • Ukraine
  • Syria

YEAR-TO-DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 6,555 shipments to 1,508 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 68 countries. These shipments included 67.9 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $414.1 million wholesale, totaling 1 million lbs.

In the News

Santa Barbara’s Direct Relief Expands Foreign Aid as White House Pulls the Plug – Santa Barbara Independent

Lifesaving Medical Training Becomes Available to Once-Isolated Areas of Syria – Relief Web

County Search/Rescue Teams Work on Reaccreditation – Noozhawk

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Medical Aid Departs for 44 U.S. States and Territories, Plus Supporting Health in Mississippi’s Delta Region https://www.directrelief.org/2025/03/medical-aid-departs-for-44-u-s-states-and-territories-plus-supporting-health-in-mississippis-delta-region/ Fri, 14 Mar 2025 19:21:48 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85884 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 361 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 17 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 7.5 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included diabetes management medications, prenatal vitamins, rare disease therapies, and more. Pfizer Foundation Video Features […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 361 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 17 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 7.5 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included diabetes management medications, prenatal vitamins, rare disease therapies, and more.

Pfizer Foundation Video Features Delta Health Center

Direct Relief partnered with the Pfizer Foundation and Delta Health Center on a USA Today feature video and story that showcases the collaborative work in building healthier communities in the Mississippi Delta region.

Delta Health Center, located in Mound Bayou, Mississippi, is the first rural community health center in the United States. The center, established in 1965, aimed to improve the health of people who were impacted by severe poverty, environmental conditions, and lack of economic resources.

The health center to continues to fill key gaps in the community today, including for people who would have no other access to health care.

Read more here.

Direct Relief was featured during the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 97th Academy Awards, which supported Direct Relief’s Los Angeles wildfire relief response. The ceremony, which was telecast on Sunday, March 2, urged viewers, attendees, and industry partners to support multiple organizations providing aid to those impacted by the fires, including Direct Relief.

“This time of year, a lucky few get to publicly thank the Academy. Fewer still get to do it on behalf of millions. Direct Relief is honored to thank the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for its support, which will help strengthen communities and aid wildfire-affected families,” said Dr. Byron Scott, CEO of Direct Relief.

Direct Relief continues to actively respond to the devastating fires by mobilizing critical medical aid, and providing financial assistance to community health centers serving displaced families and those in need of urgent medical care.

Field Medic Packs Equip First Responders in El Salvador

First responders in El Salvador recently received field medic packs from Direct Relief. The packs contain first aid essentials, including protective gear, wound care items, and other supplies for triage care during emergencies or disasters. (Photo courtesy of FUSAL)

Field medic packs, filled with emergency essentials for triage care, recently arrived in El Salvador, where they will equip first responders and enhance emergency preparedness.

Last month, in coordination with NGO FUSAL and the Salvadoran American Humanitarian Foundation, Direct Relief provided 37 packs to first responders from the Salvadoran Red Cross, the Salvadoran Volunteer Stretcher Bearer Corps, the Rescue Command, and the Salvadoran Green Cross.

Earlier this year, a series of earthquakes rattled the country, the strongest of which measured a 6.2-magnitude temblor, but minimal damage was reported. The packs will ensure first responders are ready during future emergency responses.

Since 2008, Direct Relief has provided more than $219 million in medical aid to El Salvador.

Operational Snapshot

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 340 shipments containing 1.2 million doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

  • Tree Of Life Healthcare, Georgia
  • Lestonnac Free Clinic, California
  • Findley Foundation Inc dba Findley Medical Clinic, Wisconsin
  • WATCH Healthcare Program, North Carolina
  • UMC Free Clinic, Florida
  • Grant Park Clinic, Georgia
  • Coastal Health & Wellness Galveston Cty. Health District, Texas
  • Open Arms Health Clinic, Texas
  • First Baptist Medical/Dental Clinic, Mississippi
  • Upham’s Community Care Health Center (Upham’s Corner Health Center), Massachusetts

Around the World

Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 6.3 million defined daily doses of medication totaling 41,560 lbs., to countries including the following:

  • Liberia
  • Lebanon
  • Dominican Republic
  • Iraq
  • Egypt
  • Madagascar
  • Nepal
  • Malawi

YEAR TO DATE

Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 5,961 shipments to 1,475 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 65 countries. These shipments included 69.3 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $414.1 million wholesale, totaling 1 million lbs.

News

Amgen and Amgen Foundation Donation Dollars on the Ground with Direct Relief in Wake of Southern California Fires – Amgen.com

NAU’s American Indian Nursing Program Expands With Direct Relief Grant to Tackle Critical Shortages in Native Communities – Native News Online

Direct Relief Is Prepared for a Busier 2025 – Pacific Coast Business Times

Cataract Surgery Brings Joy to Three Sisters – The Fiji Times

CIM Employees Convert Los Angeles-Area Soundstage into Fire-Victim Aid Station – CoStar

NAU’s American Indian Nursing Program Expands With Direct Relief Grant to Tackle Critical Shortages in Native Communities – Red Lake Nation News

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Wildfires Erupt Across North and South Carolina as Red Flag Conditions Stoke the Flames https://www.directrelief.org/2025/03/wildfires-erupt-across-north-and-south-carolina-as-red-flag-conditions-stoke-the-flames/ Mon, 03 Mar 2025 23:27:54 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85878 More than 170 wildfires were burning across North and South Carolina this week, forcing people from their homes and impacting air quality in many communities. Dry conditions, high winds, and ample fuel were creating ideal fire conditions across the region, including in neighboring Georgia, where the state’s forestry commission reported 137 fires burning in the […]

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More than 170 wildfires were burning across North and South Carolina this week, forcing people from their homes and impacting air quality in many communities. Dry conditions, high winds, and ample fuel were creating ideal fire conditions across the region, including in neighboring Georgia, where the state’s forestry commission reported 137 fires burning in the state.

In South Carolina, Gov. Henry McMaster declared a state of emergency on Sunday and also issued a statewide burn ban on outdoor fires.

A 1,600-acre blaze was reported in Horry County, which includes Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. The fire was 30 percent contained on Monday, according to the South Carolina Forestry Commission.

The area was experiencing thick smoke from fire activity in the Carolina Forest area, according to Horry County Fire Rescue, and South Carolina’s Department of Environmental Services issued an air quality alert on Monday.

The agency recommended that individuals with respiratory health issues limit time spent outdoors, move all activities indoors to avoid smoke or fine particulates, and keep windows and doors closed.

Fires were burning in the Blue Ridge Mountains in North Carolina, with one caused by a downed power line, according to Saluda Fire and Rescue, first responders for the mountain community south of Asheville. Several communities now threatened by wildfires in western North Carolina are still recovering from Hurricane Helene, which brought destructive floods and high winds, leaving behind extensive debris and fragile landscapes.

Direct Relief and Wildfires

Direct Relief frequently responds to health needs created by wildfires, including respiratory issues from poor air quality, lack of medication access for evacuees forced to leave home without an adequate supply of critical therapies like insulin, as well as medicines and supplies to healthcare in shelter settings and mobile clinics.

The organization has provided more than $551 million worth of medical support to North and South Carolina since 2008, including Hurricane Helene emergency response to many communities in the western parts of both states.

In response to the wildfires, Direct Relief is reaching out to health centers, free clinics, primary care associations, and more to assess medical needs.

The organization will continue to provide as the response continues.

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Medical Support Reaches Ukraine, 12 Other Countries Over Past Week https://www.directrelief.org/2025/02/medical-support-reaches-ukraine-12-other-countries-over-past-week/ Fri, 21 Feb 2025 21:00:10 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85589 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 443 shipments of requested medical aid across the U.S. and 13 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 6.7 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included antibiotics, prenatal vitamins, rare disease therapies, cancer treatments, insect repellant, insulin, and more. Medications Dispersed Throughout Northeastern […]

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Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 443 shipments of requested medical aid across the U.S. and 13 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 6.7 million defined daily doses of medication.

Medications and supplies shipped this week included antibiotics, prenatal vitamins, rare disease therapies, cancer treatments, insect repellant, insulin, and more.

Medications Dispersed Throughout Northeastern Ukraine

Staff from Charity Fund Pyvovarov distribute Direct Relief-donated medications to hospitals and clinics in Kharkiv. (Photo courtesy of Charity Fund Pyvovarov)

Hospitals, primary care clinics, and pharmacies in northeastern Ukraine received an infusion of medical support this week. Direct Relief-donated medical treatments for rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, and other illnesses were delivered to multiple facilities the Kharkiv region of Ukraine. The deliveries and distribution of the medications were conducted by Charity Fund Pyvovarov, which has supported humanitarian aid delivery to health facilities in the region.

Since Feb. 2022, Direct Relief has provided more than $1.5 billion worth of medical support to health facilities, clinics, and community organizations focused on health. More than $28 million in financial support has been provided to support health and patient care in Ukraine and beyond.

    Medical Backpacks Reach First Responders in St. Lucia

    The Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, or OECS, delivered Direct Relief-donated field medic packs to multiple organizations in St. Lucia this week. (Courtesy photo)

    This week, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States, or OECS, announced that Direct Relief-donated field medic packs had been distributed to multiple organizations in St. Lucia to strengthen emergency preparedness.

    St. Lucia, an island nation located in the eastern Caribbean, is one of 11 members of OECS. Direct Relief has partnered with OECS since 2019 to swiftly deploy medical aid to the region during hurricanes and other natural disasters and emergencies.

    Field medic packs from Direct Relief reached the Red Cross of Saint Lucia and the Saint Lucia Athletic Association via OECS this week. Other organizations also received field medic packs, including the country’s fire service, police force, Ministry of Health, facilities housing older adults, and secondary schools across eight districts.

    “This initiative highlights the OECS Commission’s commitment to building resilient communities and ensuring that essential emergency supplies are readily available to those in need,” according to a statement from OECS published this week.

    “The collaboration with Direct Relief exemplifies the power of partnerships in addressing global challenges and improving lives.”

    Field medic packs contain first aid items needed for triage care outside clinic walls. (Courtesy photo)

    Medications Reach Patients in Jordan

    A critical shipment of medications arrived in Jordan this week, and included therapies for patients with kidney conditions, autoimmune diseases, and other chronic illnesses.

    Direct Relief has provided more than $46 million in medical aid to Jordan since 2011, and continues to support health providers in the country and throughout the region.

    Operational Snapshot

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 419 shipments containing 666,614 doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

    • Clinica Esperanza/ Hope Clinic, Rhode Island
    • All For Health, Health For All, California
    • Dr. Gary Burnstein Community Health Clinic, Michigan
    • The Agape Clinic, Texas
    • A+ Counseling Center and, Maryland
    • Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Oklahoma
    • Rock Springs Clinic, Georgia
    • Findley Foundation Inc dba Findley Medical Clinic, Wisconsin
    • Hennepin Healthcare System, Minnesota
    • Medical Outreach Ministries, Alabama

    Around the World

    Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 6 million defined daily doses of medication totaling 28,462 lbs., to countries including the following:

    • India
    • Laos
    • Tunisia
    • Jamaica
    • Liberia
    • Senegal
    • Sudan
    • Ghana

    YEAR TO DATE

    Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 4,653 shipments to 1,336 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 57 countries. These shipments included 47.8 million defined daily doses of medication, valued at $271.1 million wholesale, totaling 720,068 lbs.

    In the News

    U.S.-Based Direct Relief Wins Seoul Peace Prize – The Korea Times

    Snake River Community Clinic Receives $160,000 Grant to Expand Healthcare Services – KLEW-TV

    The post Medical Support Reaches Ukraine, 12 Other Countries Over Past Week appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Healing Continues Two Years After Devastating Turkey-Syria Earthquake https://www.directrelief.org/2025/02/healing-continues-two-years-after-devstating-turkey-syria-earthquake/ Sat, 08 Feb 2025 11:55:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85247 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 525 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 22 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 3.2 million defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this week included rare disease therapies, cancer treatments, surgical supplies, personal protective equipment, insulin, and more. Long-Term […]

    The post Healing Continues Two Years After Devastating Turkey-Syria Earthquake appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 525 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 22 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 3.2 million defined daily doses of medication.

    Medications and supplies shipped this week included rare disease therapies, cancer treatments, surgical supplies, personal protective equipment, insulin, and more.

    Long-Term Recovery Continues After Turkey-Syria Earthquake

    On February 6, 2023, powerful earthquakes struck southern Turkey and northwest Syria, killing over 50,000 people and displacing hundreds of thousands.

    Two years later, recovery and rebuilding continues, including health services in the region. After the earthquakes, Direct Relief mobilized more than $200 million in medical aid, dispatching over 800 tons of supplies and more than $10 million in financial assistance to frontline healthcare providers.

    In the long-term recovery from the earthquakes, mental health support remains a critical need. Direct Relief is funding trauma prevention programs like World Human Relief, providing survivors with ongoing psychological support in a safe, healing environment. Direct Relief is also focused on rehabilitation services, and continues to support the Hatay Medical Chamber, which operates a mobile physical therapy and rehabilitation unit, which treats both adult and pediatric patients.

    This essential funding ensures communities have access to vital mental health and rehabilitation resources, supporting their long-term healing and recovery.

    Direct Relief Signs MOU with Spanish First Responder Group

    Direct Relief staff meet with BUSF members in the organization’s Madrid, Spain, headquarters. The two organizations signed an MOU in Jan. 2025 in order to collaborate on future emergency responses. (Courtesy photo)

    In January, Direct Relief signed a memorandum of understanding with United Firefighters Without Borders, or BUSF, a Spanish search and rescue group that has recently responded to extreme flooding in the Valencia area of Spain. The agreement will enable swift, coordinated action during future emergencies.

    Direct Relief has worked with BUSF during multiple disaster responses, including in response to the Nov. 2024 unprecedented rainfall and flooding, causing widespread damage and displacing thousands of residents. In response, Direct Relief provided $205,000 in emergency cash grant funds to BUSF to support their deployment to the affected region. BUSF conducted search and rescue efforts, medical evacuations, and clearing critical infrastructure to restore emergency logistics. The grant from Direct Relief enabled the team’s mobilization and funded essential equipment, including water pumps and generators.

    Direct Relief also supported BUSF after the organization deployed to support search and rescue efforts after the Sept. 2023 Moroccan earthquake. The memorandum of understanding, signed in person by Direct Relief staff at BUSF’s Madrid headquarters, will support future emergency response efforts.

    Diabetes Medications Depart for Young People in East Africa

    Medical aid departs for the Centre Jeune de Diabetique de Djibouti from Direct Relief’s warehouse on Feb. 6, 2025. (Shannon Hickerson/Direct Relief)

    This week, shipments of oral diabetes medication departed Direct Relief’s Santa Barbara warehouse for Djibouti. The medications are bound for the Centre Jeune des Diabetiques de Djibouti, a national center of excellence for the care of Djibouti’s pediatric/adolescent population with Type 1 diabetes, including patients up to 25 years old. The center provides care for hundreds of patients free of charge – including refugees and migrants, who make up a significant portion of Djibouti’s population.

    Direct Relief has also provided cold storage to the organization to support its capacity to accept temperature-sensitive medications. Direct Relief has installed three solar-powered medical-grade refrigerators with future plans to expand cold storage.

    Equipping Search and Rescue Emergency Response Teams in Mexico

    This week, first responders in Mexico were equipped with medical aid and field medic packs, which contain first-aid items for triage care outside of clinic walls. (Photo by Felipe Luna for Direct Relief)

    As part of Direct Relief’s ongoing multi-year emergency preparedness support program with FedEx, Direct Relief staff in Mexico delivered 70 field medic backpacks for first responders this week, equipping them for future emergency response.

    Mexico’s Secretariat of National Defense’s Emergency Response Battalion received the packs, along with eight emergency health kits filled with essential medications commonly requested after disasters. The emergency response battalion is trained in medical assistance and disaster relief operations, and the delivery will equip the battalion for future emergency responses.

    Operational Snapshot

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 477 shipments containing 963,531 doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

    • Port Ministries, Illinois
    • UMC Free Clinic, Florida
    • Lake County Free Clinic, Ohio
    • Iowa Harm Reduction Coalition, Iowa
    • Urban Health Plan, Inc., New York
    • Los Angeles County Public Health, California
    • PanCare of Florida, Inc. Malone, Florida
    • Fyrebird Recovery, South Carolina
    • St. Joseph Social Welfare Board, Missouri
    • Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition Inc., Connecticut

    Around the World

    Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 2.3 million defined daily doses of medication totaling 61,866 lbs., to countries including the following:

    • Djibouti
    • India
    • Liberia
    • Ukraine
    • Haiti
    • Jordan
    • Guatemala
    • Pakistan

    YEAR TO DATE

    Since January 1, 2025, Direct Relief has delivered 3,355 shipments to 1,179 partner organizations in 53 U.S. states and territories and 52 countries. These shipments contained 33.6M defined daily doses of medication valued at $171.3M(wholesale) and totaled 596,689 lbs.

    in the news

    New York Times: Help California Wildfire Victims

    NBC News | Today: California Fires – How to Help

    LA Times: How to Help Victims of Pacific Palisades, Eaton, and Hurst Fires

    Fox News: Video: How to Help Wildfire Victims

    CNN: Help Los Angeles Residents During Unprecedented Wildfires

    CNBC: Where to Give for California Wildfire Relief

    Axios: How to Help Victims of LA Fires

    ABC7: How to Help SoCal Wildfire Victims

    Charity Navigator: Where to Give for the Palisades Fire 2025

    Santa Barbara Independent: Santa Barbara Fire Crews Assist Los Angeles Wildfires

    The post Healing Continues Two Years After Devastating Turkey-Syria Earthquake appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Hughes Fire Ignites, Forcing Mass Evacuations East of Los Angeles https://www.directrelief.org/2025/01/hughes-fire-ignites-forcing-mass-evacuations-east-of-los-angeles/ Thu, 23 Jan 2025 00:28:01 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85094 With a red flag warning still in effect, another wind-driven wildfire erupted Thursday near Castaic, a community east of Los Angeles. The Hughes Fire, which began on the morning of Jan. 22, exploded to more than 8,000 acres over the course of several hours. The fire is the latest in a series of rapidly intensifying […]

    The post Hughes Fire Ignites, Forcing Mass Evacuations East of Los Angeles appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    With a red flag warning still in effect, another wind-driven wildfire erupted Thursday near Castaic, a community east of Los Angeles.

    The Hughes Fire, which began on the morning of Jan. 22, exploded to more than 8,000 acres over the course of several hours. The fire is the latest in a series of rapidly intensifying wildfires recorded throughout the region in 2025.

    More than 19,000 people were under mandatory evacuation orders from the fire on Thursday afternoon, with another 16,000 under evacuation warning, according to L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna. A portion of the area’s main highway access, Interstate 5, was closed to vehicles due to the fire, and high winds, heavy brush, and dry conditions were aiding the flames.

    Thick smoke was blanketing many communities on the Los Angeles and Ventura County lines, and the South Coast Air Quality Management District issued a smoke advisory on Thursday. The agency urged residents to stay indoors when possible and wear a mask to filter potentially harmful particles from the air.

    In response to the Hughes Fire, Direct Relief has received requests for N95 masks specifically for people working outdoors who may be exposed to the smoke, including farm workers.

    The organization is also in communication with local and regional organizations about anticipated medical needs and will continue to respond.

    The post Hughes Fire Ignites, Forcing Mass Evacuations East of Los Angeles appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    When a Parking Lot Becomes a Clinic, Patients Connect with Medicines Near Burn Zone https://www.directrelief.org/2025/01/when-a-parking-lot-becomes-a-clinic-patients-connect-with-medicines-near-burn-zone/ Tue, 21 Jan 2025 20:39:33 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=85070 Critical medications are reaching those impacted by Los Angeles-area fires, including to those seeking care at a walk-in clinic operating out of a Pasadena church parking lot. That’s where Direct Relief pharmacy staff delivered requested prescription medications, including insulin, antibiotics, and inhalers. On hand was Dr. Evelyn Lo, medical director of Medical Mission Adventures, a […]

    The post When a Parking Lot Becomes a Clinic, Patients Connect with Medicines Near Burn Zone appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Critical medications are reaching those impacted by Los Angeles-area fires, including to those seeking care at a walk-in clinic operating out of a Pasadena church parking lot.

    That’s where Direct Relief pharmacy staff delivered requested prescription medications, including insulin, antibiotics, and inhalers. On hand was Dr. Evelyn Lo, medical director of Medical Mission Adventures, a mobile medical clinic registered as a first responder with FEMA in the State of California and County of Los Angeles in the event of a natural disaster, including the recent wildfires.

    Dr. Lo said the clinic’s location was critical to meeting patients in need.

    “A lot of people live literally across the street in the burn zone,” she said, adding that the patients seeking care were already underresourced, before the fires.

    Now, with an area clinic that was a main source for healthcare destroyed in the fire, needs are even higher. Included in deliveries last week were inhalers, nebulizers, and other supplies for respiratory health, a critical issue resulting from poor air quality due to smoke and ash from the fires.

    “Whether they have asthma or they don’t, they are coming in with respiratory illnesses,” she said.

    Patients also arrived at the medical outpost with acute injuries from rapid evacuation, including abrasions and orthopedic injuries, as well as needing therapies like insulin to manage diabetes.

    Direct Relief staff also delivered P100 masks and protective equipment for people reentering burn zones. These items were provided for medical staff conducting house-to-house medical care in the area.

    Direct Relief has been providing medications to health providers caring for those impacted by the fires, including evacuees at the Pasadena Convention Center. More shipments of medical aid will depart this week for health facilities providing ongoing care.

    Direct Relief staff deliver medical support to a mobile clinic site near the Eaton Fire burn zone, where patients were seeking medical care. (Photo by Mason Poole for Direct Relief)

    The post When a Parking Lot Becomes a Clinic, Patients Connect with Medicines Near Burn Zone appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    As Smoke Thickens and Fires Continue, Medical Aid Reaches Impacted Communities https://www.directrelief.org/2025/01/as-smoke-thickens-and-fires-continue-medical-aid-reaches-impacted-communities/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 22:04:17 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=84799 Multiple fires continued to rage across the Los Angeles area this week, resulting in at least five fatalities, thousands of structures damaged or destroyed, and more than 130,000 evacuated. On Thursday, Direct Relief staff fanned across Southern California to distribute medical aid at multiple locations, including evacuation centers and community health facilities. Direct Relief maintains […]

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    Multiple fires continued to rage across the Los Angeles area this week, resulting in at least five fatalities, thousands of structures damaged or destroyed, and more than 130,000 evacuated.

    On Thursday, Direct Relief staff fanned across Southern California to distribute medical aid at multiple locations, including evacuation centers and community health facilities.

    Direct Relief maintains medical inventory commonly requested during large wildfire events, including N95 respirators, prescription medicines, Tdap vaccines, medical supplies, personal care items for evacuating people, and protective gear for post-fire recovery efforts.

    A series of support shipments have been disbursed across the city and continued on Thursday.

    One of those locations was the Arroyo Vista Community Health Center, where Direct Relief staff delivered N95 respirators, personal care products for evacuees, and solar chargers. Aid also arrived Thursday for the South Central Family Health Center, where Direct Relief staff delivered field medic packs, N95 respirators, personal care products for evacuees, and more.

    The health center provides care for underserved and uninsured patients in South Los Angeles, and will be receiving more medical aid from Direct Relief, including prescription medications, later this week to support patients impacted by the fires.

    Medical aid was also en route Thursday to AltaMed, a community health center with multiple sites in the Los Angeles area. The organization reported that one of its locations in Pasadena had been completely destroyed by the Eaton Fire this week. The organization requested 25,000 N95 respirators, which will be distributed to senior care facilities in Los Angeles and primary care patients in Pasadena.

    Direct Relief staff also delivered support this week to the Pasadena Convention Center, where hundreds of people have been evacuated, including older adults living in nearby assisted living facilities.

    The organization is continuing to coordinate with the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, California Primary Care Association, California Association of Free & Charitable Clinics, Mobile Health Care Association, Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County, Health Center Partners of Southern California, local VOAD groups, and community health centers, free and charitable clinics, and other safety net providers in the impacted areas.

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    In 2024, Health Centers Responded to Disasters, Trained the Next Generation, and More https://www.directrelief.org/2024/12/in-2024-health-centers-responded-to-disasters-trained-the-next-generation-and-more/ Fri, 27 Dec 2024 12:53:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=84509 An EF4 tornado destroys a Mississippi town as well as the community’s critical health center. Wind and water sweep through New Orleans’ Ninth Ward neighborhood. A hurricane strengthens before inundating communities in North Carolina and Georgia. These emergencies were all experienced by communities, but also by staff at health centers. But instead of shying away […]

    The post In 2024, Health Centers Responded to Disasters, Trained the Next Generation, and More appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    An EF4 tornado destroys a Mississippi town as well as the community’s critical health center. Wind and water sweep through New Orleans’ Ninth Ward neighborhood. A hurricane strengthens before inundating communities in North Carolina and Georgia.

    These emergencies were all experienced by communities, but also by staff at health centers. But instead of shying away from these disasters, those staff stepped up for their communities, many times as first responders even as they experienced the storm’s impacts personally.

    Whether through driving mobile units, creating resilient power hubs, or working to connect patients with lifesaving medications needed during an evacuation, community health centers are often on the frontlines as disasters increase in frequency and intensity.

    Through an editorial partnership, Direct Relief and the National Association for Community Health Centers, or NACHC, uncover and share stories of health centers reaching their patients in unique ways, during emergencies and beyond. These stories, published by Community Health Forum and Direct Relief, are offered free of charge for republishing and have been syndicated in various digital and broadcast outlets throughout 2024.

    The editorial partnership relies on high-quality storytelling from professional journalists at a time when health reporting from many outlets has been significantly reduced, leaving stories untold.

    In between times of emergency, health centers work each day to meet patients where they are, with personal and culturally competent care. They are also actively involved in training the next generation of health workers, many of whom have been patients themselves or have had family seek care.

    Here are some of their stories.

    Resilient Power Proves a “Lifesaver” for Mississippi Health Center After Catastrophic Tornado

    The Footprint Project deploys a solar microgrid system for Delta Health Center in Rolling Fork, Mississippi, after an EF4 tornado devastated the area in March 2023. (Photo courtesy of the Footprint Project)

    After an EF4 tornado swept through Rolling Fork, Mississippi, in March 2023, destroying one of Delta Health Center’s sites, the organization set up a temporary clinic and harnessed resilient power for nine months until a site with power became available. The microgrid allowed health center staff to treat Rolling Fork patients in their hometown.

    Adoris Turner, deputy chief executive officer at DHC, said the solar power allowed the health center to offer services through the worst phases of Rolling Fork’s recovery.

    “It was a lifesaver, and I literally mean a medical lifesaver,” Turner told Direct Relief journalist Olivia Lewis. “The ability to see a patient who may be having an asthmatic crisis or people who are having any type of medical need, it went a long way to have our facility up and running.”

    Read more.

    Shelter From the Storm: South Carolina and Georgia Clinics Stand Strong for Patients

    Flooding in Hurricane Debby’s aftermath in early August 2024. Pictured here is Richmond Hill, Georgia, outside of Savannah. The community was inundated with floodwaters, prompting evacuations. (Noah Smith/Direct Relief)

    As Hurricane Debby loomed over South Carolina in August, staff at Fetter Health Care Network, the Low Country’s only federally qualified health center, evacuated medicines and mobile units to their inland Summerville location for safekeeping.

    The following morning, on storm game day, Powers led her staff through a plan for the day to ensure that patients throughout the city and on the neighboring barrier islands would have as much time to access care and get medication refills as possible.

    “The city may shut down at 3 p.m., but we can’t do that. We have to give our patients an opportunity to get off with the shutdowns and then pick up their meds, Powers told Direct Relief journalist Noah Smith. Her staff also took vaccines off the islands in case of power outages and also coordinated with migrants to help them with supplies and to find off-island shelters.

    Read more.

    This San Diego Health Center Offers Patients a Career Focused on Community

    Diana Garcia Cortes recently celebrated her graduation from the medical assistant program at the Laura Rodriguez Medical Assistant Institute. Garcia Cortes was able to complete the program in under a year and is pictured here with her daughter after graduation. (Photo by Diana Garcia Cortes)

    One health center decided to train people who wanted a career in health care, starting with its own patients. The Laura Rodriguez Medical Assistant Institute, a program of the Family Health Centers of San Diego, reported that 65% of participants in its medical assistant program have been health center patients themselves, and aim to better reflect the community they serve, reported Olivia Lewis.

    FHC of San Diego has 27 locations, which serve about 160,000 patients annually, with over 95% of them living at or below 200% of the federal poverty line, according to HRSA data. Most identify as part of a racial or ethnic minority.

    For Diana Garcia Cortes, who graduated from the program in August, one of 15 in her cohort, the program was a game-changer. “It’s really, honestly life-changing to know that within a year I’m able to have a different career, better opportunities, a different job,” she said.

    Read more.

    As Francine Bears Down on New Orleans, A Health Center Braces for Impact — and Plans for Uncertainty

    Field medic packs, equipped with medical essentials for patient care outside of clinic walls, are packed at Direct Relief’s warehouse and bound for Baptist Community Health Services in New Orleans, Louisiana, on Sept. 10, 2024. The region is bracing for high winds and storm surge from Tropical Storm Francine, expected to intensify into a hurricane in the coming days. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

    Tropical Storm Francine was sweeping towards New Orleans, but in the city’s Lower Ninth Ward, Teresa Bovia kept her health center’s doors open.

    Regardless of the impending storm, six new patients had already needed walk-in appointments at Baptist Community Health Services, Inc., where Bovia is the chief operating officer. Most needed to refill their medications before the storm hit, but hadn’t been able to contact their regular doctors. The health center’s existing patients also needed insulin or other medications, or wanted to check their blood pressure, before sheltering in place.

    “The people we serve, they don’t have the means to leave,” Bovia explained to Talya Meyers, Direct Relief’s senior editor and writer. In New Orleans’s Lower Ninth Ward, where Bovia works, patients are always vulnerable. She explained that life expectancy in the community is fully 20 years lower than it is for residents of her home neighborhood 15 minutes away.

    “We know [the inequity] is there and it’s our responsibility to do something about it,” she said.

    Read more.

    A New Generation of Doctors Looks to Health Centers for Residency

    Dr. Jon Nguyen teaching doctors as part of the Institute for Family Health’s residency programs. (Photo courtesy of Erin Edwards/EFIE Creative)

    When Dr. Joronia Chery applied for a residency program, it wasn’t at a hospital, but a community health center.

    “I came here because this is where I see myself making the most difference. It feels like treating my grandmother or my mother,” said Dr. Chery, a first-year resident at the Institute for Family Health’s Harlem location. Her decisions stemmed from growing up witnessing the healthcare gaps in her Brooklyn community, where she had to travel 30 minutes by bus to the closest community health center.  

    Many residents, like Chery, intentionally choose the program because they see themselves in their patients, reported Noah Smith. Fluent in French and Haitian Creole, she has bridged language gaps that might otherwise complicate care. “When a patient hears someone speaking their language, their shoulders relax. They know they’re in the right place,” she said.

    Read more.

    The post In 2024, Health Centers Responded to Disasters, Trained the Next Generation, and More appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    2024: Stories of Resilience https://www.directrelief.org/2024/12/2024-stories-of-resilience/ Mon, 23 Dec 2024 12:12:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=84551 Midwives reaching women and babies still experiencing the impacts of last year’s Maui wildfires. Doctors in Haiti keeping the doors open for patients, even at immense personal risk. A trafficking survivor using lived experience to help others. Direct Relief relies on their expertise to know what is needed, and their resilience represents the best of […]

    The post 2024: Stories of Resilience appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Midwives reaching women and babies still experiencing the impacts of last year’s Maui wildfires. Doctors in Haiti keeping the doors open for patients, even at immense personal risk. A trafficking survivor using lived experience to help others.

    Direct Relief relies on their expertise to know what is needed, and their resilience represents the best of humanity even in the darkest of times.

    This year, Direct Relief has shipped more than $1.6 billion in medical aid to 90 countries. But behind those abstract numbers are real people, working to serve others in tremendously challenging situations, whether during an emergency or while experiencing limited resources — or both.

    Here are some of their stories.


    Kranti Tamang on the Anti-Trafficking, Anti-Stigma Revolution

    Shanti (left) and Kranti Tamang (right) pictured at one of the Shanti Foundation’s health camps, which provide services to rural communities that lack full access to maternal and child healthcare. (Photo courtesy of the Shanti Foundation)

    Trafficking survivor Shanti Tamang, and her daughter, Kranti, are providing safe spaces for survivors to thrive and dismantle the stigma that comes with living with HIV in Nepal.

    Shanti had been taken from her job in Nepal and forced into sex trafficking in India as a teenager. After escaping and returning home, Shanti’s family and community rejected her upon learning she was living with HIV, and she was forced to find work and housing on her own. For a time, she was so unwell that she had to leave her daughter, Kranti, at an orphanage.

    Then, in 2015, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit Nepal, and a border blockade between Nepal and India, cut off the supply of critical medications into Nepal, including the HIV treatment on which Shanti’s life depended.

    With the help of a friend, Shanti connected with Direct Relief, which provided a supply of antiretroviral drugs for a number of Nepali people living with HIV, including Shanti.

    “We love to say that Direct Relief saved my mother’s life,” Kranti shared with Direct Relief’s Brianna Newport. “And when she felt that she had been given a second chance to her life, she had to do more for her community.”

    Shanti went on to found the Shanti Foundation, which works to rescue, rehabilitate, and reintegrate trafficking survivors and people living with HIV.

     Read more.


    Plan A Health Hits the Road for Patients in Mississippi Delta

    Mayor of Sunflower, Desiree Norwood, and Plan A Health’s nurse practitioner Meta Anderson, prepare Plan A Health’s mobile medical unit for patient care, (Olivia Lewis/Direct Relief)

    A local team travels across the Mississippi Delta to ensure every adult has access to quality reproductive care, contraceptives, and trusting relationships with their medical team.

    Plan A provides reproductive and primary care health throughout the Mississippi Delta, a region that historically has had poor health outcomes and low economic status. Their small team operates a mobile medical unit, outfitted with two exam rooms, that truck driver Antoinette Roby drives from city to city.

    Since its inception in 2018, Plan A has expanded to include a pharmacy, mail-order prescriptions, options for contraceptives, pre-and-post-natal care for patients with HIV, and telehealth for family planning. They’ve also hired a nurse practitioner that patients can call or text directly to ask questions.

    The team includes Desiree Norwood, who is the mayor of her hometown of Sunflower, Mississippi. Norwood said when the mobile medical unit arrives in Sunflower, people are excited because Plan A has built a reputable reputation.

    “A lot of organizations come into the community, and they do evaluations and research and then what happens? They leave,” she told Direct Relief journalist Olivia Lewis. “We’ve actually been able to fill a lot of gaps and alleviate some of those barriers that they’re facing.”

    “This isn’t working a job, it’s a passion,” Norwood said.

    Read more.


    In Panama, Type 1 Diabetes Care Improves by Empowering Young People

    Education days are key to the efforts of DiabetesLATAM, a patient advocacy group that not only works to get patients donated medications and supplies, but the education needed manage diabetes effectively. Here, a child receives an insulin pen at a DiabetesLATAM education day. (Photo Courtesy of DiabetesLATAM)

    Pilar Gomez, DiabetesLATAM’s founder and director, started DiabetesLATAM after moving to Panama in 2017 with a son and daughter diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes. With little in the way of services for people living with diabetes in Panama, Gomez decided to change that, reported Brianna Newport.

    Kids like her own needed reliable access to insulin. Through contacts at the International Diabetes Federation, she got in touch with the Life for a Child team, an Australia-based NGO that, in partnership with Direct Relief, provides insulin to young people in 45 under-resourced countries.

    When plans to provide insulin and education through a local hospital fell through, Gomez created a completely volunteer-run program separate from the hospitals for families that don’t have guaranteed insulin access. The program began in August 2022 with 30 kids enrolled, and in the last two years, it has grown to support 150 kids with diabetes care. That means that DiabetesLATAM now provides care for roughly 1 out of every 10 people living with Type 1 in Panama, according to the prevalence numbers from the Type 1 Index.

    Read more.


    “Living Day by Day,” Health Staff in Haiti Keep Hospital Doors Open as Violence Continues

    A health worker at St. Boniface Hospital checks on an infant. Staff at health facilities across Haiti continue providing care amid unrest. (Photo courtesy of Health Equity International)

    Since 2010, Haiti has faced a catastrophic earthquake that killed more than 200,000 people, Hurricane Matthew, cholera outbreaks, the assassination of former President Jovenel Moïse in July 2021, and a 7.2-magnitude earthquake the following month. Gang violence continued to rock the country this year, and health providers went to heroic lengths to show up to work, putting themselves at risk, reported Direct Relief journalist Noah Smith.

    “We’ve never seen a situation like this,” said Dr. Marc Edson Augustin, medical director of the St. Luke’s Foundation, which runs a hospital in Port-au-Prince and clinics nationwide that care for about 60,000 patients annually.

    Direct Relief provided $1 million in financial support to health organizations across the country so they could maintain operating budgets and continue serving patients.

    Read more.


    Health Care Hero: A Landfill Fire Was Poisoning Her Patients. She Cared for Them at Home.

    Alejandra Hernandez Ezquivel provides medical care for patients in the Escalerilla community, as the nearest clinic is more than an hour away. (Courtesy photo)

    Alejandra Hernandez Ezquivel was in her house in the 500-person community of Santa María Chimalhuacán, in eastern Mexico, when her husband came running indoors. The landfill nearby — the one that had appeared one day out of nowhere years earlier, with no opportunity for the community to object — was on fire.

    “It was like a monster, so immense,” she told Talya Meyers, Direct Relief senior editor and writer, through a translator, recalling the fire that began raging on May 29, 2022. The blaze was out of control by the time firemen arrived at the rural community, located in the municipality of Chimalhuacán, about an hour away from Mexico City.

    Ezquivel cared for patients all the while, eventually working to help establish a full-time primary care center, funded by the NGO Fundación Escala, which Direct Relief has supported with medications. With the nearest health facility two hours away, the primary care center fills a huge gap in care.

    “Whatever patients need, that’s what we provide,” Ezquivel explained.

    Read more.

    After a Disaster, “the Mothers Will Call You to Where You Need to Be”

    Staff with Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i meet with patients during a mobile clinic visit. (Oliver Riley-Smith)

    Picture a disaster’s first responders. A firefighter dousing a blaze or a doctor treating a critical injury might come to mind. But midwives caring for pregnant women and newborns are also critical responders during disasters, a fact that Sunny Chen, executive director of Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i, knows firsthand.

    “When the disaster happened, our Maui partners called us and said, ‘we need you to come,’ and so we brought the mobile clinic here and we were able to provide critical medical care and services,” she said. “That’s the amazing thing about midwives and nurses. We just do whatever it takes, and we adapt.”

    The organization’s midwives and nurses were some of the first medical responders to reach Maui after the devastating 2023 wildfires and continue to provide care for families.

    “When you take care of mothers and pregnant and parenting people, you really take care of a whole community,” Chen said. “The mothers will call you to where you need to be.”

    Read more.


    For Kids with Diabetes, This Summer Camp Is Like Any Other. But It’s Theirs.

    Two campers fish while their campmates go for a paddle on Jenks Lake. (Noah Smith/Direct Relief)

    Camp Conrad Chinnock in Southern California looks right out of a movie set: archery set, mess hall, climbing wall, flagpole, even a swimming pool. Campers laugh and lurch about, making jokes and trading stories as they walk to the next activity together, reported Direct Relief journalist Noah Smith when he visited the camp this summer.

    The familiar atmosphere is precisely the aim. Camp Conrad Chinnock’s purpose is to give children with Type 1 diabetes a typical summer camp experience. Due to the nature of T1D, it’s not a simple proposition.

    “The burden of diabetes management is minute-to-minute, constant, 24 hours. You can’t quit. And it’s always part of your thinking in the background. But when you come to camp, you have a support network that helps to carry your load,” said Tracy Fulkerson, a former camper who is now on the medical staff at the camp and works as a pediatric intensive care unit nurse supervisor at Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego.

    Having trained support staff and medications and supplies needed to manage diabetes allows campers to focus on fun. Direct Relief’s insulin donations, which are used every day during the camp season, keep prices affordable. Without them, the cost of attendance would multiply several times over, said Rocky Wilson, camp director.

    “Camp could not exist without donated insulin.”

    Read more.


    Fire Destroyed an Island Hospital. Months Later, a Honduran Free Clinic Is Still Bridging the Gap.

    Pharmacy staff at Clinica Esperanza work with patients. The organization provides primary care services for people living in Roatan and has been seeing even more patients after a local hospital was destroyed by a fire. (Courtesy photo)

    When a fire had destroyed the only public hospital on the island of Roatán, Honduras, staff at Clinica Esperanza, a local free clinic, were part of an immediate, community-wide response.

    Thousands relied on the hospital for care, reported Direct Relief journalist Olivia Lewis. Patients and hospital staff were being routed to local medical practices to receive emergency care, and Clinic Esperanza staff said they couldn’t imagine having to turn anyone away.

    “I cannot handle the idea that people can die because they don’t have any other option,” said Kallie Vallecillo, CEO of Clinica Esperanza, which has operated in the community for 22 years.

    Clinica Esperanza, which relies on medical students and volunteers to operate, extended its daily hours to meet the increased need.

    Read more.


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    Healing Generational Trauma through Cultural Connection in Alaska https://www.directrelief.org/2024/12/healing-generational-trauma-through-cultural-connection-in-alaska/ Tue, 10 Dec 2024 13:41:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=84270 Inside a downtown Anchorage storefront, two dozen carving stations hum with activity as men work on traditional Native Alaskan designs, inscribing them into ivory. The Alaska Art Alliance provides space for these men, many of whom are experiencing homelessness, to come inside and out of the harsh elements and connect with their culture. The Utuqqanaatmiñ […]

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    Inside a downtown Anchorage storefront, two dozen carving stations hum with activity as men work on traditional Native Alaskan designs, inscribing them into ivory.

    The Alaska Art Alliance provides space for these men, many of whom are experiencing homelessness, to come inside and out of the harsh elements and connect with their culture.

    The Utuqqanaatmiñ project, or “From Our Elders,” seeks to overcome generational trauma by connecting Alaska Native people with cultural practices. The Alaska Native Heritage Center, or ANHC, in Anchorage, serves as a cultural and educational hub established 25 years ago by the Alaska Federation of Natives. The cultural center works to share the heritage of Alaska’s diverse Indigenous cultures and support them with programming that spurs social change and community healing.

    “Trauma can be very personal, but it’s also collective,” said Emily Edenshaw, President and CEO of the Native Alaskan Cultural Heritage Center. Native children separated from family and culture in boarding schools, relocation from climate change, and the erasure of cultural practices all contribute to that collective trauma, she said.

    ANHC works with partner organizations, including the Alaska Art Alliance, to provide the necessary infrastructure for more than 25 Alaska Native men who are experiencing homelessness. The program uses the cultural practice of ivory carving to create a safe space for healing via the art form.

    A high percentage of homeless individuals in Anchorage identify as Alaska Native, Edenshaw said, and the program offers them a space to create work that they can then sell, including at the Native Alaskan Cultural Heritage Center.

    Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity supported the Alaska Art Alliance, through the Native Alaskan Cultural Heritage Center, with a $150,000 grant.

    Connecting to culture is a beginning to healing from trauma, which has real health impacts on Native people, Edenshaw said.

    “A lot of the health issues we see today, whether it’s substance abuse, whether it’s suicide rates, whether it’s domestic violence rates… We have to understand that these are symptoms of a root cause.”

    “We know that the strongest form of medicine is connection to culture,” she said. “We are in a generation of healing. This has really allowed us to operationalize our unconditional love for our community. We want to find ways to help our people become more whole.”

    Since 2021, Direct Relief, through its Fund for Health Equity, has granted more than $50 million to 163 organizations across the U.S.

    This video was directed, produced, and edited by Oliver Riley-Smith Cinematography.

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    Strengthening Healthcare Services in Haiti https://www.directrelief.org/2024/12/strengthening-healthcare-services-in-haiti/ Sat, 07 Dec 2024 12:34:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=84117 Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 392 shipments of requested medical aid to 47 U.S. states and territories and 16 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 2.3M defined daily doses of medication. Medications and supplies shipped this month included anesthesia medications for surgery, cancer therapies, insulin, rare disease medications, and more. Medical Support Arrives […]

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    Over the past week, Direct Relief has delivered 392 shipments of requested medical aid to 47 U.S. states and territories and 16 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 2.3M defined daily doses of medication.

    Medications and supplies shipped this month included anesthesia medications for surgery, cancer therapies, insulin, rare disease medications, and more.

    Medical Support Arrives in Haiti

    Medical aid arrives in Les Cayes, Haiti, to support local health services. (Hope for Haiti photo)

    Critical medical aid from Direct Relief arrived recently in southern Haiti to support healthcare providers working to reach patients.

    A medical shipment containing antibiotics, oral rehydration salts, IV fluids, personal protective equipment, and more was received by staff from NGO Hope for Haiti. The organization runs Infirmary St. Etienne, a healthcare facility in Les Cayes, Haiti, which provides primary care, referrals, and medication for patients in need.

    Shipping medical donations into Haiti continues to be challenging, particularly as the main international port in the capital of Port-au-Prince is regularly disrupted by gang violence. Recently, commercial flights have been suspended due to attacks on airlines looking to land at the capital city’s Toussaint Louverture International Airport.

    Direct Relief has been working with local organizations in Haiti to support medical needs dynamically as shipping routes and roadways change due to the country’s security situation.

    The supplies from Direct Relief will support Infirmary St. Etienne, as well as mobile clinics and other partner healthcare facilities in southern Haiti.

    Direct Relief Awarded for Earthquake Response in Turkey

    Direct Relief CEO Thomas Tighe receives an award for the organization’s earthquake response from the Association of Public Health Specialists of Turkey in Ankara in Dec. 2024. (Direct Relief photo)

    Direct Relief staff were in Ankara, Turkey, this week to meet with local organizations supported as part of the recovery from the 2023 earthquake that devastated large portions of the country.

    Direct Relief CEO Thomas Tighe spoke at the National Congress of Public Health, where Direct Relief was given several awards, from the Association of Public Health Specialists of Turkey. Direct Relief supported the organization in the efforts to strengthen women’s health in Hatay after the Feb 23 EQs.

    Direct Relief CEO Thomas Tighe speaks in Ankara, Turkey. (Direct Relief photo)

    Direct Relief also received an award from the Psychiatry Association of Turkey and the Emergency Medicine Association of Turkey for support during earthquake response and recovery.

    Critical Medical Aid Supports Lebanon’s Health System

    Six tons of medical aid, including medications, vitamins, and field medic packs for triage care recently arrived in Lebanon. The shipment, received by Anera, will be distributed to public hospitals and other healthcare facilities in the country, in coordination with Lebanon’s Ministry of Health.

    YemenAid CEO Visits Direct Relief

    This week, Direct Relief hosted YemenAid CEO Summer Nasser, who spoke about the organization’s work in Yemen and Direct Relief-supported efforts to strengthen health services in the country.

    YemenAid CEO Summer Nasser speaks at Direct Relief on Dec. 4, 2024. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

    Nasser spoke about the challenges of strengthening medical care amid conflict and lack of infrastructure, including limited electricity and clean water access. Direct Relief has supported the organization with more than $12.5 million in medical aid since 2017, including cancer treatment therapies for breast cancer clinics in the country.

    The organization has also received more than $360,000 in financial aid, including funds that supported two oxygen plants that strengthen hospital capacity for critical services.

    Humble Bundle Selects Direct Relief as Charity of the Month

    Humble Bundle announced this week that Direct Relief will be its featured charity of the month for December, continuing a partnership that has raised more than $10 million to support health and humanitarian efforts worldwide. Contributions from Humble’s community have been instrumental in funding disaster response efforts, including recent support for communities impacted by Hurricanes Helene and Milton, wildfires, and global crises.

    As Dr. Byron Scott, Direct Relief COO, shared: “For more than a decade, Humble Bundle has stood alongside Direct Relief, helping ensure people in crisis have access to the care they need. With support from the Forward Fund, Direct Relief is ready for disasters before they even happen and able to respond whenever they occur. We are profoundly grateful for Humble Bundle’s partnership and to the Humble community.”

    Operational Snapshot

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 373 shipments containing 709,279 doses of medication during the past month to organizations, including the following:

    • Volunteers in Medicine Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
    • Lloyd F. Moss Free Clinic Pharmacy, Virginia
    • Asociación Puertorriqueña Pro Bienestar de la Familia, Puerto Rico
    • UNC Health Specialty & Home Delivery Pharmacy, North Carolina
    • NOVA ScriptsCentral, Virginia
    • The Way Free Medical Clinic, Inc., Florida
    • MAHEC Community Pharmacy at Biltmore, North Carolina
    • Greenville Free Medical Clinic, South Carolina
    • Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Oklahoma
    • Open Door Health Center, Florida

    Around the World

    Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 1.6M defined daily doses of medication totaling 26,291 lbs., to countries including the following:

    • Tanzania
    • Jordan
    • Uganda
    • Armenia
    • Sudan
    • Ghana
    • Central African Republic
    • India

    YEAR TO DATE

    Since January 1, 2024, Direct Relief has delivered 23.1K shipments to 2,392 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 89 countries. These shipments contained 379.9M defined daily doses of medication valued at $1.5B (wholesale) and totaled 4.9M lbs.

    in the news

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    Thousands Evacuated as Mountain Fire Threatens Homes in California https://www.directrelief.org/2024/11/thousands-evacuated-as-mountain-fire-threatens-homes-in-california/ Fri, 08 Nov 2024 01:03:05 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=83670 A vicious, wind-driven fire continued to blaze this week in Ventura County, California, where the Mountain Fire burned more than 80 homes to the ground and threatened thousands more. At least 10,000 people were under mandatory evacuation orders in the county as firefighters continued their air assault on the blaze, with water drops deluging the […]

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    A vicious, wind-driven fire continued to blaze this week in Ventura County, California, where the Mountain Fire burned more than 80 homes to the ground and threatened thousands more. At least 10,000 people were under mandatory evacuation orders in the county as firefighters continued their air assault on the blaze, with water drops deluging the flames from above and hand crews working on the ground below.

    Direct Relief staff were in Ventura County on Thursday distributing respirators and other requested medical aid to support people who have been evacuated by the fires, as well as those impacted by poor air quality.

    According to the Air Quality Index, “unhealthy” levels of particulates in the air were measured in the Oxnard and Camarillo areas of Southern California on Thursday, and many communities downwind from the blaze were inundated with high levels of smoke from the Mountain Fire.

    Direct Relief staff distributed 3M-donated N-95 respirators from a distribution point at the YMCA in Ventura for the public to pick up throughout the day, and Direct Relief staff also made deliveries across the county to agencies and organizations serving impacted communities.

    The Mixteco Indigena Community Organizing Project, or MICOP, works with indigenous migrant communities, many of whom work in agricultural industries in the county. The group received N-95 respirators to distribute to people exposed to poor air while working outdoors.

    Respirators were also delivered to the Ventura County Farm Bureau to support farmworkers potentially impacted by poor air quality, as well as to the Ventura County Office of Emergency Services.

    The Westminster Free Clinic, which is located several miles from a mandatory evacuation zone, also received N95 respirators and hygiene items to distribute to people who have been evacuated from their homes.

    On Thursday, Santa Barbara County Fire Department was providing aerial support with the country’s helicopter that was retrofitted for large water drops. Direct Relief provided financial support to outfit the helicopter with the ability drop about 1,000 gallons of water, and the helicopter is used frequently to douse wildfires in the county, and is also deployed to nearby counties, including Ventura, to support air operations.

    Dry conditions and high winds also prompted a smaller 50-acre fire to break out near Vandenberg Air Force Base near Lompoc in Santa Barbara County, and Direct Relief will respond to any needs that become known from that fire as well.

    Direct Relief has a long history of responding to wildfires throughout the state, as well as across the U.S. The organization maintains a medical inventory, including medications often requested during fire events. Those items include respiratory medications, including inhalers and nebulizers for people with asthma, ophthalmic medicines, and medications for chronic diseases, such as diabetes and high blood pressure, which can create emergency situations if unmanaged. Medical support requested in the recovery phase often include tetanus vaccine to protect people clearing debris from their properties.

    Direct Relief also maintains an inventory of personal protective equipment for people returning to their homes to begin cleanup in areas that are often filled with hazardous ash. During past fires, including the 2023 Maui wildfire, Direct Relief equipped people returning to their homes with protective respirators, coveralls, goggles, gloves, and shoe covers to protect them from ash that can contain heavy metals and other harmful chemicals.

    The organization is in contact with the Ventura County Office of Emergency Services, California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, California Primary Care Association, and California Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, and will continue to respond to medical needs as they become known.

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    Direct Relief Offers Support After Spain’s Deadly Floods https://www.directrelief.org/2024/10/direct-relief-offers-support-after-spains-deadly-floods/ Thu, 31 Oct 2024 19:43:35 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=83548 Devastating flash floods swept through eastern portions of Spain this week, with the death toll climbing to more than 150 people on Thursday. In what some experts are calling Spain’s worst natural disaster in living memory, flash floods deluged towns in eastern Spain, including Valencia, with the waters inundating roadways with debris, floating vehicles, and […]

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    Devastating flash floods swept through eastern portions of Spain this week, with the death toll climbing to more than 150 people on Thursday.

    In what some experts are calling Spain’s worst natural disaster in living memory, flash floods deluged towns in eastern Spain, including Valencia, with the waters inundating roadways with debris, floating vehicles, and downed power lines.

    The country has been in a multi-year drought, with hardened ground unable to absorb the rain failing late Tuesday night and early Wednesday. Rains have continued this week, and search and rescue operations are ongoing.

    Direct Relief has offered support to Bomberos Unidos Sin Fronteras, a Spanish search-and-rescue NGO. Direct Relief has worked with the group in the past, including during search and rescue operations after earthquakes destroyed communities in the High Atlas Mountains of Morocco, where the organization supported response.

    Direct Relief will respond to needs as they become known.

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    After Hurricanes, Mobile Medicine Meets Patients Where They Are https://www.directrelief.org/2024/10/after-hurricanes-mobile-medicine-meets-patients-where-they-are/ Fri, 25 Oct 2024 19:15:10 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=83292 Health Services Reach Communities Battered by Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Anti-Infection Therapies Arrive in Gaza. California Free Clinics Convene at Direct Relief.

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    Over the past 7 days, Direct Relief has delivered 470 shipments of requested medical aid to 41 U.S. states and territories and 10 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 4.7M defined daily doses of medication.

    Medications and supplies shipped this week included field medic packs for triage care, thyroid medications, anti-inflammatory medications, personal protective equipment, rare disease therapies, and more.

    Mobile Health Services Reach Hurricane-Battered Communities

    Emergency response continues for Direct Relief as communities in the southeastern U.S. recover from back-to-back hurricanes.

    As of October 25, Direct Relief had dispatched 111 shipments of specifically requested emergency medical aid valued at nearly $2.5 million to 26 healthcare providers responding to the needs of storm-affected communities in Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.

    Among medical items shipped are antibiotics, emergency medical backpacks, hygiene kits, over-the-counter products, personal protective equipment, and medications to manage chronic diseases, as well as tetanus vaccine, hepatitis A and B vaccines, epinephrine for allergic reactions from bee and yellow jacket stings, oral rehydration salts, and water purification tablets.

    Recently, Dr. Yousef Motii, a clinician for Oceana Community Health who has been providing medical outreach in the Spanish Lakes community, which was hard-hit by tornadoes during Hurricane Milton’s path, delivered Direct Relief-donated hygiene items to the community. Dr. Motii also used a Direct Relief field medic pack to support the triage care of patients.

    This week, Direct Relief announced $700,000 in direct cash support to 28 organizations providing healthcare services in hurricane-impacted communities. These grants are designated to individual health centers, charitable clinics, and other nonprofit providers responding to these crises, in order to keep health care services accessible to low-income patients affected by these disasters.

    Critical Anti-Infection Therapies Arrive in Gaza

    An eight-pallet shipment of antibiotic therapies recently arrived for cancer patients in Gaza living with reduced immunity. The Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital has historically treated thousands of patients with cancer in Gaza, but the hospital became non-operational until a recent relocation of services to Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

    NGO Anera, which worked with Direct Relief to transport the donation into Gaza, delivered the medication to the hospital’s relocated facility, which includes a cancer treatment center.

    Direct Relief continues to provide humanitarian support to Gaza and regionally. So far in 2024, Direct Relief has provided more than $255 million in requested aid across the region, including to Egypt, Gaza, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, West Bank, and Yemen.

    California Free Clinics Convene at Direct Relief

    Direct Relief staff welcomed representatives from more than 33 free clinics across the state of California on Oct. 25, 2024, at Direct Relief. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

    Representatives from more than 33 free clinics across the state of California convened this week at Direct Relief.

    The California Association of Free and Charitable Clinics Annual Conference and Membership meeting met in Direct Relief’s Hatch Hall on Friday morning, kicking off a two-day conference, covering topics including sustainable funding strategies, legal and policy issues, and the current landscape in the state for free and charitable medical care.

    Direct Relief staff welcomed the clinic representatives, briefing attendees on the history of the organization, Direct Relief’s work to support free clinics in the state during wildfires, floods, and the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as product support available for request.

    Since 2008, Direct Relief has supported 71 free and charitable clinics throughout California with more than $30 million worth of medicines and medical supplies. Fifteen clinics across the state have also received $1.29 million in cash grants to support programs focused on health equity and mental health.

    Operational Snapshot

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 445 shipments containing 1.8M doses of medication during the past seven days to organizations, including the following:

    • PanCare RX, Florida
    • Community Volunteers in Medicine, Pennsylvania
    • PryMed Medical Care, Inc., Puerto Rico
    • Fundacion Manos Juntas, Oklahoma
    • Morton Comprehensive Health Services, Oklahoma
    • UHI CommunityCare Clinic, Florida
    • Community Care Clinic, North Carolina
    • New Song Health Center, Illinois
    • Mercy Medical Clinic, Kentucky
    • Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i, Hawai’i

    Around the World

    Globally, Direct Relief shipped over 1.7M defined daily doses of medication totaling 22,179 lbs., to countries including the following:

    • Senegal
    • Malawi
    • Yemen
    • St. Lucia
    • India
    • Zimbabwe
    • Guatemala
    • Sudan

    YEAR TO DATE

    Since January 1, 2024, Direct Relief has delivered 20.3K shipments to 2,269 partner organizations in 54 U.S. states and territories and 88 countries. These shipments contained 349.5M defined daily doses of medication valued at $1.4B (wholesale) and totaled 4.3M lbs.

    In the News

    After Hurricane Helene, Pop-Up Microgrids Powered Medical Clinics, Water Generators, Communications Equipment, and Other Critical Resources – Microgrid Knowledge

    Familiar with disaster, New Orleans-area residents step up to help after Hurricanes Helene, Milton – NOLA.com

    As Hurricane Milton hits Florida, how New Yorkers can help loved ones in harm’s way – CBS News

    Hurricane Milton: How to donate, receive help in Palm Beach County – The Palm Beach Post

    This San Diego Health Center Offers Patients a Career Focused on Community – Angels in Medicine

    Solon Schools’ Comet Care initiative seeks to provide relief for hurricane victims – Cleveland.com

    Amid Haiti Turmoil, Direct Relief and Partners Test New Pathways for Insulin Donations – Angels in Medicine

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    Hurricane Helene Strengthens As It Tracks Towards Florida Coastline https://www.directrelief.org/2024/09/hurricane-helene-strengthens-as-it-tracks-towards-florida-coastline/ Wed, 25 Sep 2024 20:27:21 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=82636 Hurricane Helene rapidly intensified as it tracked toward Florida’s Big Bend area, with the storm expected to make landfall on Thursday, potentially as a Category 3 hurricane. The storm presents “danger of life-threatening storm surge… along the entire Florida Peninsula and Florida Big Bend, where a storm surge warning is in effect,” according to the […]

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    Hurricane Helene rapidly intensified as it tracked toward Florida’s Big Bend area, with the storm expected to make landfall on Thursday, potentially as a Category 3 hurricane.

    The storm presents “danger of life-threatening storm surge… along the entire Florida Peninsula and Florida Big Bend, where a storm surge warning is in effect,” according to the National Hurricane Center.

    More than 32 million people are under flood watch, and 61 counties in Florida are currently under a state of emergency declaration.

    Direct Relief has a long history of responding to hurricanes in the U.S., including Hurricane Ian, which made landfall in 2022 in the Fort Myers area, and Hurricane Michael, a Category 5 storm that had devastating impacts in 2018 on the Mexico Beach community, which is currently near Helene’s projected path.

    In advance of the storm, Direct Relief is in contact with national, regional, state, and local organizations about potential medical needs expected from Helene’s impacts.

    These include the Florida Association of Community Health Centers, the Florida Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, the National Association of Community Health Centers, the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, the Mobile Healthcare Association, as well as Direct Relief-supported health facilities in the expected area of impact.

    In advance of hurricane season, Direct Relief pre-positions caches of essential medicines in storm-prone areas of the U.S. Gulf Coast and Caribbean. These hurricane preparedness packs are designed to contain medical essentials needed to sustain health services. Multiple clinics in the storm’s projected path are equipped with these modules, and have access to these medications if needed.

    The organization also maintains a medical inventory to address health issues that often arise from a hurricane’s aftermath. People who depend on medication to manage chronic diseases, including diabetes and high blood pressure, can end up in medical crisis without access to these medications, which can be left behind during evacuation. Field medic packs are often requested for those providing triage care outside of clinic walls, and personal protective equipment, including masks and gloves, have been used during the recovery phase of a storm, as well as tetanus vaccine and other protective measures for those involved in debris and storm cleanup.

    Direct Relief will respond to needs as they become known.

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    Mpox Response: Direct Relief Channels Funding, PPE to Support Health Efforts in Africa https://www.directrelief.org/2024/09/as-mpox-cases-climb-direct-relief-channels-funding-ppe-to-support-health-efforts-in-africa/ Wed, 18 Sep 2024 19:26:18 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=82490 In response to the escalating mpox outbreak in Africa, Direct Relief announced today that the organization would commit funds to support prevention efforts as well as provide an infusion of personal protective equipment, or PPE, with the goal of protecting health workers. Direct Relief is awarding a grant of $50,000 to the nonprofit Jericho Road […]

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    In response to the escalating mpox outbreak in Africa, Direct Relief announced today that the organization would commit funds to support prevention efforts as well as provide an infusion of personal protective equipment, or PPE, with the goal of protecting health workers.

    Direct Relief is awarding a grant of $50,000 to the nonprofit Jericho Road for mpox response, which will be used to fund prevention and treatment programs in the three IDP (internally displaced people) camps near their facility in the Democratic Republic of Congo, or DRC. Jericho Road plans to operate and equip health checkup stations, temporary isolation units for mpox patients that are awaiting hospital transfer and hold mpox awareness and preventative health training.

    The commitment comes as Direct Relief continues to coordinate vaccine delivery to countries most impacted by the mpox outbreak. On Sept. 12, officials from the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said 107 new deaths and 3,160 new cases had been recorded over the preceding seven days.

    “We are extremely grateful for our continued partnership with Direct Relief. It is our mission to bring quality healthcare to our most vulnerable neighbors. We are committed to that effort, especially in this moment,” said Chantal Mandro, Clinic Director for Jericho Road’s Wellness Clinic in Goma, DRC. “The most recent financial support from Direct Relief will allow us to further support the folks living in the camps near our clinic and to keep our staff and their families safe, as we do so. At Jericho Road we strive to love our neighbor, as best we can.”

    Direct Relief has worked with Jericho Road during previous outbreaks, including during the 2019 Ebola outbreak in eastern DRC. Direct Relief and Jericho Road worked to deliver PPE to the North Kivu provincial Department of Health, and the organizations are exploring the same approach as North Kivu is experiencing some of the highest rates of mpox in Africa.

    The Jericho Road Wellness Center is based in Goma, DRC, near three large IDP camps in North Kivu, and the spread of mpox in these camps was noted as an area of concern by Africa CDC. The province of North Kivu is home to over 2.5 million internally displaced people, and conflict and insecurity throughout the region have caused the additional displacement of over 500,000 people in North Kivu over the last year, which has played a factor in the recent mpox outbreak.

    “Direct Relief is honored to support Jericho Road’s Wellness Center, where staff are deeply committed to providing care to the community each day, and now are stepping up even more to help patients impacted by this outbreak,” said Jeffrey Samuel, Direct Relief’s Regional Director for Africa. “Protecting and equipping health workers is a top priority, and these funds and medical support will help staff deliver care at a time when it is urgently needed.”

    Jericho Road’s Wellness Center receives an average of 200 patients per month from the camps, and through their relationship with the regional ministry of health, has access to the camps and the Provincial Hospital, which is the main referral center for mpox patients in Goma.

    In addition to funds, Direct Relief is assembling comprehensive kits for medical providers and patients affected by mpox. Each kit includes personal protective equipment such as gloves, gowns, N-95 masks, goggles, and shoe covers to protect 100 healthcare workers. The kits also contain medications for pain management and skin irritation, wound care supplies, and disinfectant wipes for up to 1,000 patients.

    The post Mpox Response: Direct Relief Channels Funding, PPE to Support Health Efforts in Africa appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Medical Shipments Pulse Into Hurricane Francine-Impacted Areas as Hundreds of Thousands Still in the Dark https://www.directrelief.org/2024/09/medical-shipments-pulse-into-hurricane-francine-impacted-areas-as-hundreds-of-thousands-still-in-the-dark/ Thu, 12 Sep 2024 19:06:45 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=82343 More than 373,000 people across four states were without power Thursday as a result of Hurricane Francine, which swept through southern Louisiana and weakened as it traveled inland, sending rain and winds across Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee. The storm made landfall as a Category Two hurricane on Wednesday, but no fatalities were reported in Louisiana […]

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    More than 373,000 people across four states were without power Thursday as a result of Hurricane Francine, which swept through southern Louisiana and weakened as it traveled inland, sending rain and winds across Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee.

    The storm made landfall as a Category Two hurricane on Wednesday, but no fatalities were reported in Louisiana as of Thursday morning, according to Gov. Jeff Landry, who addressed the public during a press conference.

    A large amount of rainfall inundated the New Orleans metropolitan area, with some pockets of the city recording as much as seven inches of water.

    With widespread power outages continuing, Direct Relief is in contact with health facilities in the area and was fulfilling requests for medical aid from New Orleans area health centers on Thursday. Requests included N-95 masks, diabetes management supplies including glucose test strips, naloxone, respiratory medications, and over-the-counter products.

    The organization has been responding to needs this week, including a shipment of field medic packs to health staff in New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward.

    Direct Relief will continue to monitor requests for medications and other needs as power remains intermittent in the region.

    The post Medical Shipments Pulse Into Hurricane Francine-Impacted Areas as Hundreds of Thousands Still in the Dark appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Nurturing a Future of Abundance on Hawai‘i’s Big Island https://www.directrelief.org/2024/08/nurturing-a-future-of-abundance-on-hawaiis-big-island/ Wed, 28 Aug 2024 21:27:42 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=82137 Each week, on 10 acres of farmland on the northeastern coast of Hawai‘i’s Big Island, children get a chance to be part of planting and harvesting, a practice that not only yields food for the community, but connects young people to the land, or ‘āina. “Our youth education programs cultivate that sense of love for […]

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    Each week, on 10 acres of farmland on the northeastern coast of Hawai‘i’s Big Island, children get a chance to be part of planting and harvesting, a practice that not only yields food for the community, but connects young people to the land, or ‘āina.

    “Our youth education programs cultivate that sense of love for place in our youth from a young age,” said No’eau Peralto, executive director of Hui Mālama i ke Ala ʻŪlili, or huiMAU. The nonprofit has been focused on decreasing food insecurity by transforming acres of former sugar plantation into Hawai‘i’s largest regenerative breadfruit agroforest. Breadfruit is a culturally significant food and was once a primary starch in the traditional Native Hawaiian diet.

    Food insecurity became more apparent during the Covid-19 pandemic, Peralto said, and the group is focused on sustainable food production so that “when something like this happens again, it won’t be such a crisis, in terms of food, at least.”

    HuiMAU was one of two groups Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity supported with $450,000 through the Consuelo Foundation. The foundation has worked with communities across Hawai‘i since 1986, focusing on promoting well-being and preventing abuse and neglect.

    The foundation funneled that financial aid, as well as infrastructure and in-kind support, to two Native Hawaiian organizations, huiMAU (featured in the video above) and Moloka‘i Child Abuse Prevention Pathways on the island of Moloka‘i. Both are collaborating on interventions to support children, adults, and the communities on two islands to improve their health and well-being.

    The organizations are working to positively impact the social determinants of health through a holistic approach, viewing culture as a protective factor that can help children and families thrive. Both nonprofits are working to reduce health disparities and promote wellness in their respective rural communities.

    “My hope is that we’re able to envision a future of abundance, and we’re bringing that vision into reality for our next generation to then take the vision further beyond what we could ever imagine in our time now,” Peralto said.

    Video directed, produced, and edited by Oliver Riley-Smith
    Director of Photography – Will Jobe
    Additional footage – Anianikū Chong
    Featuring – No’eau Peralto, ‘Elika Jardin, Tim Garren
    Special thanks to Dawn Mahi, Haley Kailiehu, Martha Lee

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    As Case Numbers Climb from Deadly Mpox Outbreak, Direct Relief Secures Critical Vaccine Donation https://www.directrelief.org/2024/08/as-case-numbers-climb-from-deadly-mpox-outbreak-direct-relief-secures-critical-vaccine-donation/ Wed, 21 Aug 2024 22:44:38 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=81989 In response to the current mpox outbreak, which has recorded more than 15,000 cases worldwide and resulted in 500 deaths since the start of 2024, Direct Relief is preparing to increase humanitarian vaccine access along with other critical medical resources to countries and populations most impacted by the disease. On August 14, 2024, the World […]

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    In response to the current mpox outbreak, which has recorded more than 15,000 cases worldwide and resulted in 500 deaths since the start of 2024, Direct Relief is preparing to increase humanitarian vaccine access along with other critical medical resources to countries and populations most impacted by the disease.

    On August 14, 2024, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the mpox outbreak in Africa a public health emergency of international concern.

    Direct Relief’s Response

    On Monday, Emergent announced that Direct Relief would receive a donation of 50,000 doses of a vaccine for mpox, as well as diluent solution, needles, and syringes required for administration. The donation includes 50,000 doses of ACAM2000®, (Smallpox (Vaccinia) Vaccine, Live) for potential deployment across often difficult-to-reach locations, and as informed by local and regional health authorities.

    Direct Relief is preparing to send the vaccines and other aid to health facilities and organizations in impacted countries that include the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, and others. Direct Relief is working with the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other organizations to coordinate in-country storage, logistics, and distribution of the vaccines.

    The vaccine will require ultracold temperature transport of -15 °C throughout shipment, and cold storage upon arrival. Direct Relief specializes in cold-chain medication transportation and logistics, and built robust cold-chain storage capabilities during the Covid-19 pandemic, which required temperature-sensitive vaccine and medication management.

    Direct Relief is also in communication with other manufacturers of vaccines for mpox, as well as other companies that manufacture mpox non-vaccine products. The organization is also assessing the need for additional medical aid to support vaccine administration, including portable ultracold storage units. Equipment for disease prevention and treatment, including personal protective equipment such as masks, gloves, goggles, and gowns, is also being offered to support vaccination efforts.

    New Variants Prompt Another Global Health Emergency

    Mpox saw an outbreak from 2022-2023 in multiple countries and was declared a global emergency. The current outbreak is believed to have been caused primarily by new variants considered to be more virulent than the one responsible for the 2022 outbreak. Mpox transmission occurs through close contact with infected animals, exposure to bodily fluids, and skin-to-skin contact, including sexual activity.

    Since the beginning of 2024, more than 15,000 cases and more than 500 deaths have been reported, with most of the transmission focused in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and neighboring countries in central Africa.
    Outside of the continent, cases of the newer variant of mpox have also been recorded in several countries.

    The current outbreak has had a disproportionate impact on vulnerable populations, including children. According to the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, children under 18 comprise approximately 70% of cases in the DRC, with those under 15 accounting for 85% of fatalities. Low immunity to the disease and prevalence of malnutrition could put children at increased risk. Also at heightened risk are displaced people in refugee camps in eastern DRC due to increased transmission risks associated with overcrowding and inadequate sanitation, and healthcare workers, particularly in areas with limited access to personal protective equipment.

    Mpox has been reported in the DRC for more than a decade, and the number of cases reported each year has increased steadily over that period, according to a statement from the World Health Organization. The WHO reported that over 100 laboratory-confirmed cases of the new variant, known as clade 1b, have been reported in four countries neighboring the DRC that had not reported mpox before: Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, and Uganda.

    The WHO Director-General triggered the process for Emergency Use Listing for mpox vaccines, which will accelerate vaccine access for lower-income countries which have not yet issued their own national regulatory approval, according to the statement.

    Emergent, which is providing the 50,000 vaccine dose donation to Direct Relief, has submitted an Expression of Interest for the vaccine to be added as an Emergency Use Listing, according to a statement from Emergent published this week.

    Past Outbreaks, Experience Guide Emergency Approach

    Beyond response in Africa, Direct Relief is also strategically positioned to respond globally with cold chain support, and has standing agreements with coordinating regional agencies across the world, including the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), International Office for Migration (IOM), Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) and more.

    Direct Relief has an extensive track record addressing infectious disease outbreaks globally – from Dengue Fever, to Emergency Use Authorization Covid-19 vaccines and therapies, to Ebola in various parts of Africa, as well as shipping cold-chain and ultra-cold-chain prescription medication shipments globally.

    The organization has also worked in Africa for decades, including during the Ebola epidemic, during which the organization was one the world’s largest providers of PPE to protect health workers treating patients with the highly virulent disease.

    Direct Relief maintains an office in South Africa, and has staff in Africa that coordinate ongoing shipments to more than 35 countries.

    Direct Relief’s Tom Roane and Rachel Green contributed to this report.

    The post As Case Numbers Climb from Deadly Mpox Outbreak, Direct Relief Secures Critical Vaccine Donation appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    After a Disaster, “the Mothers Will Call You to Where You Need to Be” https://www.directrelief.org/2024/08/after-a-disaster-the-mothers-will-call-you-to-where-you-need-to-be/ Tue, 06 Aug 2024 22:50:23 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=81610 Picture a disaster’s first responders. A firefighter dousing a blaze or a doctor treating a critical injury might come to mind. But midwives caring for pregnant women and newborns are also critical responders during disasters, a fact that Sunny Chen, executive director of Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i, knows firsthand. “When the disaster […]

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    Picture a disaster’s first responders. A firefighter dousing a blaze or a doctor treating a critical injury might come to mind. But midwives caring for pregnant women and newborns are also critical responders during disasters, a fact that Sunny Chen, executive director of Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i, knows firsthand.

    “When the disaster happened, our Maui partners called us and said, ‘we need you to come,’ and so we brought the mobile clinic here and we were able to provide critical medical care and services,” she said. “That’s the amazing thing about midwives and nurses. We just do whatever it takes, and we adapt.”

    The organization’s midwives and nurses were some of the first medical responders to reach the island after the fires and continue to provide care for families.

    As the one-year anniversary of the Maui wildfire approaches, this video, produced by Direct Relief, spotlights Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i and the vital role it played during the crisis. The organization’s efforts build on its 30 years of dedicated work to improve maternal, child, and family health across the state, ensuring safe pregnancies, reducing cesarean birth rates, decreasing postpartum mood and anxiety disorders, and increasing breastfeeding rates, particularly among high-risk pregnant and birthing individuals, with a particular focus on Native Hawaiians, Indigenous peoples, and COFA migrants.

    In the fire’s aftermath, Direct Relief provided Healthy Mothers, Health Babies of Hawai’i $550,000 in emergency operating funds to support the coalition’s critical work.

    Direct Relief’s support for the coalition dates back years. Since 2020, Direct Relief has provided the organization with medical aid and support, including grants through its Fund for Health Equity totaling $675,000 to expand mobile services and maternal and child health care into the community.

    From the immediate medical care provided by mobile clinics to the long-term support for displaced families, the coalition’s work highlights the indispensable role of midwives and nurses in disaster recovery.

    “When you take care of mothers and pregnant and parenting people, you really take care of a whole community,” she said. “The mothers will call you to where you need to be.”

    This video was directed, produced, and edited by Oliver Riley-Smith Cinematography.

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    In Haiti, Conflict, Displacement, and Health Challenges Converge https://www.directrelief.org/2024/04/in-haiti-conflict-displacement-and-health-challenges-converge/ Tue, 16 Apr 2024 19:20:12 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=79084 Health providers, data experts and community leaders convened last week to outline some of the health challenges in Haiti, compounded by gang violence, food insecurity and mass displacement. The event was moderated by Andrew Schroeder, co-founder of CrisisReady and Vice President of Research and Analysis for Direct Relief. CrisisReady, a research-response initiative at Harvard and […]

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    Health providers, data experts and community leaders convened last week to outline some of the health challenges in Haiti, compounded by gang violence, food insecurity and mass displacement.

    The event was moderated by Andrew Schroeder, co-founder of CrisisReady and Vice President of Research and Analysis for Direct Relief. CrisisReady, a research-response initiative at Harvard and Direct Relief, has been tracking trends in Haiti, where Schroeder said the current situation is the most dire since the 2010 earthquake, with violent attacks on hospitals, police stations, and financial institutions becoming increasingly commonplace, along with widespread food insecurity. Nearly 5 million Haitians are experiencing acute food insecurity, according to the United Nations.

    “It’s impacted every area of society and caused a mass displacement event,” he said.

    Dr. Natalie Colas, Internist and Medical Director at St. Luke Family Hospital in Port-au-Prince, described challenges at every level of the health system in Haiti, from health providers leaving the island to patients putting off coming to the hospital to existing staff being unable to get to work due to kidnapping risk.

    St. Luke Foundation operates 10 health facilities, about half of which are in the capital. The organization has taken safety measures for employees, including allowing them to stay at a guest house for up to a week if demonstrations prevent them from getting home safely.

    When able, health providers will give patients a three-month supply of prescription medication instead of monthly to limit trips that could put them at risk of gang violence, she said. But supplies and medications are scarce.

    “Without an immediate option to refill them in the coming days, I don’t know what we’re going to do… It’s really difficult for us to run the hospital,” she said. “For now, we have a little bit of reserve for emergency patients.”

    Only two or three public hospitals in the metro area remain open, she said.

    St. Luke’s has oxygen production capability, an asset that allows them to continue treating patients with respiratory needs without having to make dangerous trips outside the facility to fill up oxygen canisters. Direct Relief supported the facility with oxygen canisters during the Covid-19 pandemic, and recently supported the hospital with emergency operating funds.

    A noticeable spike in gang-related violence and fatalities has occurred in the country since the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moise, said Sandra Pellegrini, Latin America and Caribbean Regional Specialist with the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, or ACLED. The nonprofit has been tracking news events in the country to identify trends.

    Pellegrini said that civilians are bearing the brunt of the violence of armed groups and increased use of kidnapping and sexual violence, which is underreported but still “striking” in the data set.

    The number of active gangs has also increased in recent years, and violence has expanded beyond the capital into the Artibonite and Centre regions, where violence has doubled. Gangs have focused on taking control of major highways and sea access with interceptions of supply boats.

    Xavier Vollenweider, Director of Mobile Data Partnerships with Flowminder.org, a platform that has processed mobile data from cell provider Digicel, the main cell provider in Haiti, and has been monitoring population movement. Port au Prince has seen its population decrease since 2021, while cities like Cap Haitien and Les Cayes have increased.

    Marie Rose Romain Murphy, Co-Founder and Board President of the Haiti Community Foundation and ESPWA Inc., focused on humanitarian and disaster response. The International Office of Migration has been monitoring displacement, and more than 116,000 people have fled the capital for Haiti’s southern peninsula, where Roman Murphy’s foundation operates.

    The destabilization and destruction of infrastructure have been decades in the making and compounded by natural disasters, she said. Romain Murphy encouraged keeping local communities and organizations at the table where decisions are being made instead of from a distance. “It starts with community and ends with community,” she said

    Direct Relief, which has a long history of supporting Haitian health facilities through crisis and natural disasters, recently committed $1 million to local health facilities to support operating expenses and staff costs.

    The post In Haiti, Conflict, Displacement, and Health Challenges Converge appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    Shipments Reach Community Rocked by Destructive Tornado in Louisiana https://www.directrelief.org/2024/04/shipments-reach-community-rocked-by-destructive-tornado-in-louisiana/ Mon, 15 Apr 2024 20:41:16 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=79059 A powerful storm system swept through areas of the U.S. Gulf Coast last week, with one community experiencing damage that hasn’t been seen since Hurricane Katrina, according to the town’s mayor. Residents of Slidell, Louisiana, a city about an hour from New Orleans, experienced impacts consistent with at least one EF-2 tornado, damaging hundreds of […]

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    A powerful storm system swept through areas of the U.S. Gulf Coast last week, with one community experiencing damage that hasn’t been seen since Hurricane Katrina, according to the town’s mayor.

    Residents of Slidell, Louisiana, a city about an hour from New Orleans, experienced impacts consistent with at least one EF-2 tornado, damaging hundreds of homes and businesses in the area and displacing dozens. Several temporary shelters have been activated in the area, and thousands experienced power outages last week. New Orleans and surrounding areas also experienced flash flooding from the storm, with some roadways becoming inundated with heavy rains.

    People displaced from their homes after natural disasters, including tornadoes, can be at medical risk if they evacuate without prescription medications needed to manage their health. On Thursday, Direct Relief shipped requested personal care items to people residing in shelters.

    Staff from Baptist Community Health Services reported at least 50 families in the community lost everything, and the organization requested personal care kits from Direct Relief. The kits contain items including soap, toothpaste, toothbrushes, shampoo, and more, and are created for people displaced from their homes during times of disaster. The kits were dispatched last week and have since been distributed to people at local shelters.

    Direct Relief will continue assessing needs in the area and responding as requested.

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    As Severe Weather Sweeps Across U.S., Direct Relief Offers Support https://www.directrelief.org/2024/01/as-severe-weather-sweeps-through-u-s-direct-relief-offers-support/ Tue, 09 Jan 2024 19:11:18 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=77392 Many parts of the United States are experiencing extreme weather this week as multiple storm systems coalesce over regions in the Northeast and South, Midwest, Plains, and Pacific Northwest. Several tornadoes were reported in Florida’s Panhandle on Tuesday morning, including in the Panama City area, and more than a dozen counties were under tornado warning […]

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    Many parts of the United States are experiencing extreme weather this week as multiple storm systems coalesce over regions in the Northeast and South, Midwest, Plains, and Pacific Northwest.

    Several tornadoes were reported in Florida’s Panhandle on Tuesday morning, including in the Panama City area, and more than a dozen counties were under tornado warning conditions as the storm moved eastward.

    Snow and icy conditions had swept through many areas of the Midwest and Plains regions, with some recording blizzard conditions. Heavy rains and high winds were also present in many areas of the U.S, including the Northeast, prompting flash flood warnings.

    Health needs during extreme weather can vary, from risks of hypothermia due to extreme temperature swings to health risks associated with power outages. Evacuations and displacement from tornadoes and other storms can bring risks if evacuees are without medications to manage chronic conditions for extended amounts of time.

    Direct Relief is in communication with health centers, free clinics, primary care associations and other organizations about potential needs and maintains an emergency stockpile of essential medicines often requested.

    The organization is ready to respond to requests as needed.

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    Throughout a Tumultuous 2023, Ordinary People Achieved the Extraordinary https://www.directrelief.org/2023/12/throughout-2023s-tumultuous-times-ordinary-people-achieve-the-extraordinary/ Wed, 20 Dec 2023 13:38:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=76904 2023 had no shortage of precedent-breaking situations, from natural disasters to civil conflict and war. Events unfolding around the world in rapid succession have required Direct Relief to do more, more often, than ever before. As a support organization, Direct Relief works to equip medical providers in their own communities. Often, this occurs during times […]

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    2023 had no shortage of precedent-breaking situations, from natural disasters to civil conflict and war. Events unfolding around the world in rapid succession have required Direct Relief to do more, more often, than ever before.

    As a support organization, Direct Relief works to equip medical providers in their own communities. Often, this occurs during times of unimaginable crisis, when people step into the unknown to help.

    A 23-year-old in eastern Ukraine deciding to stay and help his community. A midwife reaching patients by watercraft after land routes were destroyed or cut off by wildfire. A mother, with her two children in tow, leading her family through the jungle to receive life-saving medical care in the U.S.

    These, and many others, are a few of the individuals Direct Relief’s work has overlapped with over the past 12 months, and they reveal the creativity required to survive — and help others — along the way.

    Here are some of their stories.


    Jungle, Thieves, and Worse: A Mom’s Epic Journey To Save Her Daughter

    Alejandra Jimenez and her family lift her nine-year-old daughter, Nicole, onto the ferry connecting Manhattan and Ellis Island. The family migrated north from Venezuela to seek medical care for Nicole’s medical conditions. (Photo by Oscar B. Castillo for Direct Relief)

     Alejandra Jimenez, 27, her husband, and her young daughter stayed in their hometown of Barquisimeto, Venezuela, for as long as they could. But when her daughter’s serious medical needs exceeded the care available, Jimenez made the decision to undergo the perilous journey from Venezuela to the United States. She and her family are among the 100,000 migrants who arrived in New York City from spring 2022 to August 2023.

    To meet the health needs of those new arrivals, Ryan Health, a federally qualified health center, part of a national safety net clinic system that provides care for everyone who requests it regardless of their ability to pay, has stepped up.

    “We reached out to the mayor’s office, catholic charities, and shelter providers in the area to offer our services because we suspected individuals would need health care,” said Daniel Pichinson, executive director of Ryan Health’s Chelsea-Clinton clinic, estimating that Ryan Health has onboarded about 3,000 migrants in the past year. Direct Relief’s Noah Smith and freelance photojournalist Oscar Castillo met Jimenez, as well as health providers meeting the needs of those seeking asylum in the United States.

    Read more.


    After Fighting Erupts in Eastern Ukraine, a Young Volunteer Steps Up

    Staff from Yevgen Pyvovarov’s Charity Fund, which operates in the region of Kharkiv, received 38 pallets of medicines and respirators for hospitals throughout Kharkiv. (Courtesy photo)
    Staff from Yevgen Pyvovarov’s Charity Fund, which operates in the region of Kharkiv, received 38 pallets of medicines and respirators for hospitals throughout Kharkiv. (Courtesy photo)

    In May, Direct Relief’s Nick Allen met with a young volunteer in Eastern Ukraine, who was one of many whose world had been turned upside down after the Russian invasion but who quickly swung into action to help fellow Ukrainians.

    “I want to be useful,” said 23-year-old Pavlo, whose last name was withheld for security reasons. Pavlo works with the Yevgen Pyvovarov Charity Fund to deliver aid to besieged communities in Eastern Ukraine.

    Covid-19 had forced him to return home from a study abroad program in China, and the attack on Ukraine upended his plans once again. Pavlo and his family found themselves in occupied territory and eventually made it to Ukrainian territory. Declared unfit for military service because of a long-time knee injury, Pavlo had a decision to make: To endure the constant bombardments in Kharkiv city or head elsewhere, abroad even. “I had an opportunity to leave, but I declined. This is a decisive point for my country,” he said.

    Read more of Pavlo’s story here.


    Supporting Physical and Financial Health in Mississippi

    Demetric Burrage, nurse at Aaron E. Henry Health Center in Clarksdale, Mississippi, is part of the health center’s work to reach patients and support their physical and financial health. (Photo by Oliver Riley-Smith for Direct Relief)

    Health providers screening for the social determinants of health — information about the conditions of a person’s life, from housing and transportation to access to clean air and water — is nothing new. Adding a picture of a person’s financial health and stressors, like debt burden, is a new angle.

    It’s one the Aaron E. Henry Community Health Center, located in Clarksdale, Mississippi, is asking about to help their patients more holistically. It’s also the goal of the center’s Health Wealth program to address financial insecurity and its direct impact on health.

    Aaron E. Henry received $100,000 from Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity, via the AbbVie Foundation, to launch the program with the goal that it serves patients across the Mississippi Delta, and could be replicated in health centers across the U.S.

    Read more.


    After the Fires, Providing Community Care in Maui

    Staff from Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i arrive in the harbor at Lahaina with an emergency medical backpacks for care. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

    After devastating fires swept through Maui in August, local groups quickly mobilized to help those impacted. One of those groups, based in Oahu, worked to get medical care to people in any way possible.

    The women of Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i and the nonprofit’s partners arrived at the site of the wildfire by jet ski, boat, and car to help those in need. Direct Relief has funded the group with emergency operating grant and has also shipped requested medicines to the group so they can continue their work providing care.

    Read more.


    Medical Interpreters Improving Health for Patients, One Conversation at a Time

    Medical interpreters are trained at Centro Hispano in Knoxville, Tennessee. They serve as a bridge between patients and doctors for better health. (Image by Olly Riley-Smith for Direct Relief)

    During a medical visit, communicating the symptoms and state of one’s health is essential to receiving sound treatment and a diagnosis. For patients communicating in a language different than that of their medical provider, medical interpreters can help bridge the language gap, as well as advocate for their patients.

    That’s exactly what a group of young interpreters with Centro Hispano de East Tennessee are accomplishing. They’ve expanded to include medical interpretation, one of the most requested services by both the Latino community, as well as the medical facilities in the area.

    Centro Hispano received $186,000 from Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity, via Eli Lilly and Company, to develop a pilot program of medical Interpreters that will address current inequities by recruiting and training a group of multi-lingual youth seeking to learn new skills, join the healthcare workforce and serve their community.

    Read more.


    Direct Relief Equips Doctors Providing Care After Hurricane Otis

    Medical Impact volunteers prepare emergency tools for 12 doctors who arrived on Oct. 30, 2023, to provide basic medical services in Acapulco this week. Direct Relief provided the group with a $25,000 emergency operating grant as well as essential medications and field medic packs to support services. (Courtesy photo)

    When Hurricane Otis, a devastating Category 5 storm inundated Mexico’s west coast, local groups jumped into action, including Medical Impact. After the storm left more than 100 hospitals and clinics damaged or destroyed, the group took medical care into the community to meet needs.

    Read more.

    Rehabilitation Effort in the Twin Cities Helps Ukrainians Recoup from War

    Ukrainians who have lost limbs during the war are given prosthetics and learn rehabilitation exercises at the Protez Foundation. (Olivia Lewis/Direct Relief)

    Direct Relief’s Olivia Lewis traveled to Oakdale, Minnesota, to see the efforts of the Protez Foundation in action, which connects Ukrainians living with amputations to customized prosthetics and rehabilitation. Yakov Gradinar, a certified prosthetist and orthotist with the foundation, was working to fit people with prosthetics when Direct Relief visited the foundation in August.

    Protez provides prosthetics to children and soldiers who have lost limbs during the Russo-Ukrainian War, and had provided over 260 high-quality prostheses and over 90 prosthetics. At the time of Direct Relief’s visit, six patients and their families were participating, the thirteenth group to take part in the program.

    Read more about their work.


    ‘Death Just Beneath You’: Doctor Describes Turkey Earthquake, Ongoing Challenges

    Dr. Yusuf Cekmece transporting donations from Direct Relief into his makeshift office inside a shipping container. (Photo by Francesca Volpi for Direct Relief)

    Dr. Yusuf Çekmece, 40, is a family medicine specialist based in Antakya, Turkey, which was hard hit by the devastating earthquakes on February 6, 2023, that killed more than 50,000 people.

    Dr. Çekmece is part of the Turkish Medical Association, which Direct Relief has supported with grant funding to meet the needs of earthquake zone-impacted doctors, many of whom were displaced by the damage from February’s quake, including Dr. Çekmece. His home and office were destroyed, so he practices medicine from a shipping container and continues serving the community.

    Read more.


    “Providing Dignity to Humanity,” Free Clinics Expand Mental Health Care

    Shawn Smith (second from right) with Symba Center staff (Ben Bishop for Direct Relief)

    About 85 miles northeast of Los Angeles, in the high desert, sit the ruins of George Air Force Base. From World War II through the end of the Cold War, activities on the site helped prepare pilots for battlefields worldwide. But today, a new fight is taking place at the decommissioned base.

    Symba Center is a free clinic that operates out of a former gym that was converted into a wellness center for the community during the Covid-19 pandemic. Last year, Symba Center was among 11 free and charitable clinics which received a $75,000 grant to expand mental health care access to some of the most vulnerable populations in the United States. Over $17 million worth of mental health-targeted Teva pharmaceuticals were also made available to over 400 free and charitable clinics.

    As a result of the grants, free and charitable clinics have been able to hire additional staff, launch internship programs, offer educational resources, including group sessions, increase collaborative efforts with local organizations and providers, and implement mental health screening programs for their patients. In total, these clinics have reached, directly and indirectly, about 22,000 people.

    Read more.


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    Responding to the Opioid Crisis in West Virginia https://www.directrelief.org/2023/12/responding-to-the-opioid-crisis-in-west-virginia/ Mon, 18 Dec 2023 18:35:06 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=77087 One free clinic located in the epicenter of the opioid crisis has gone above and beyond to save lives and connect those with substance use disorder to lifesaving resources, including opioid-overdose-reversing naloxone. This video, produced by Pfizer and Direct Relief, highlights the efforts of Milan Puskar Health Right, a free clinic that offers harm reduction […]

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    One free clinic located in the epicenter of the opioid crisis has gone above and beyond to save lives and connect those with substance use disorder to lifesaving resources, including opioid-overdose-reversing naloxone.

    This video, produced by Pfizer and Direct Relief, highlights the efforts of Milan Puskar Health Right, a free clinic that offers harm reduction services in Morgantown, West Virginia.

    The state has the highest opioid overdose death rate in the U.S., according to 2021 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To address demand, the clinic has expanded to offer comprehensive harm reduction services, including the distribution of naloxone to those with substance use disorders and their families.

    Over the past five years, more than 2.6 million doses of naloxone have been provided at no charge to organizations in all 50 U.S. states and three territories.

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    Fund for Health Equity Summit Convenes Health Leaders from Across U.S. https://www.directrelief.org/2023/12/fund-for-health-equity-summit-convenes-health-leaders-from-across-u-s/ Wed, 13 Dec 2023 00:41:17 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=77053 Hundreds of healthcare professionals from around the country converged in Santa Barbara, California, for a multi-day Direct Relief summit focused on advancing health equity in the U.S. Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity provides financial support to community health centers, free and charitable clinics, educational institutions and other community-based organizations fighting the inequities that further […]

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    Hundreds of healthcare professionals from around the country converged in Santa Barbara, California, for a multi-day Direct Relief summit focused on advancing health equity in the U.S.

    Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity provides financial support to community health centers, free and charitable clinics, educational institutions and other community-based organizations fighting the inequities that further health disparities. Since 2021, Direct Relief, through the Fund, has granted more than $42.5 million to 145 organizations across the U.S.

    This week, representatives of these organizations are coming together to meet and share their learnings in Santa Barbara, California. Their efforts, which span the country, include serving refugee populations in North Dakota, providing medical translators in Tennessee, operating a mini nurses academy in Alabama, running a clinic focused on health and financial health in Mississippi, conducting street medicine outreach in Chicago, and offering indigenous health services on the Northern Cheyenne reservation.

    The summit’s agenda includes sessions on diverse topics such as data-driven storytelling, community health worker strategies, mobile health services, street medicine, maternal care, mental health, and prevention strategies, all viewed through a health equity lens.

    Dr. Regina Benjamin, U.S. Surgeon General during the Obama administration and Founder and CEO of BayouClinic in Bayou La Batre, Alabama, addressed the audience Tuesday morning, emphasizing the importance of health equity and the critical roles nonprofits play in advancing health equity.

    Dr. Benjamin also serves on the advisory council of Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity.

    “You are part of an entire movement to make this a healthier nation,” she told the audience.

    The Fund for Health Equity gathered health leaders from across the country to share learnings. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

    Daniel Dawes, Senior Vice President of Global Health & Executive Director of the Global Health Equity Institute and Founding Dean of the School of Global Public Health at Meharry Medical College, delivered the keynote address examining the country’s 400-year history of health inequities.

    The inequalities seen in U.S. society — past and present — were not an accident and will take concerted political effort to undo and rectify, he said.

    Dawes spoke about the “political determinants of health,” constructed barriers that keep people from living healthy lives. Dawes stressed that effective policy change is essential for rectifying these long-standing issues. Social determinants of health, like access to housing, clean food and water, and timely medical care, are often discussed, but “underlying each one is a political determinant that we can no longer ignore,” he said.

    Policies that intentionally excluded healthcare for people who worked in agricultural industries and as domestic workers, highway planning that placed roads through under-resourced communities, exposing them to air contaminants, and housing policies like redlining are all examples.

    “Only policy can fix what policy created,” he said.

    Dawes encouraged the audience to continue their work and pointed to examples of change occurring when policy and local efforts combine. “It gives me a sense of hope about how much we can accomplish together,” he said. “This movement is not for the faint of heart. It takes tremendous courage.”

    Dawes also took part in a panel discussion on the importance of collaboration and proactive health strategies with Dr. Benjamin and two other advisors of Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity Advisors, including Gail Small, Head Chief Woman and citizen of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe, and Martha Dawson, President and CEO of the National Black Nurses Association and Associate Professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

    Dr. Benjamin encouraged the conference participants to continue the work at the local level.

    “Leadership starts in this room,” she said.

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    Direct Relief Assesses Medical Needs After Deadly Tennessee Tornadoes https://www.directrelief.org/2023/12/direct-relief-assesses-medical-needs-after-deadly-tennessee-tornadoes/ Mon, 11 Dec 2023 23:45:29 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=77029 Deadly tornadoes swept through multiple counties in Tennessee over the weekend, killing at least six people and injuring dozens. More than 15,000 people were without power on Monday, and shelters have been activated for people displaced from their homes due to the infrastructure damage and power interruptions. Three people were killed in Davidson County, which […]

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    Deadly tornadoes swept through multiple counties in Tennessee over the weekend, killing at least six people and injuring dozens.

    More than 15,000 people were without power on Monday, and shelters have been activated for people displaced from their homes due to the infrastructure damage and power interruptions. Three people were killed in Davidson County, which includes Nashville, and there other deaths were recorded in Clarksville in Montgomery County, located on the Tennessee-Kentucky border.

    Direct Relief has offered assistance to health centers and free clinics in impacted areas. Direct Relief is in communication with the Faith Family Medical Clinic, Matthew Walker Comprehensive Health Center, Neighborhood Health, Siloam Health, and University Community Health, all located in Davidson County, Tennessee. The organization is also reaching out to facilities in Montgomery County about potential needs.

    In addition to acute injuries from flying debris and structural damage, tornado impacts can also create a host of other health concerns, including a lack of access to chronic disease medications, which can result in emergency room visits.

    Direct Relief maintains an inventory of medications commonly requested after disasters and has responded to past tornadoes in the region, most recently in December 2021, when tornadoes wreaked havoc across multiple states, including several of the areas impacted by this week’s storms.

    The organization will continue to respond to needs as they become known.

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    Direct Relief Equips Doctors Providing Care After Hurricane Otis https://www.directrelief.org/2023/10/direct-relief-equips-doctors-providing-care-after-hurricane-otis/ Mon, 30 Oct 2023 22:55:13 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=76026 After last week’s rapidly intensifying Category 5 storm inundated Mexico’s west coast, many areas still lack power and communication in the Acapulco area, where historic Hurricane Otis made landfall. The storm’s death toll has risen to 45 people, and 47 people are still missing, according to Evelyn Salgado, Guerrero state governor. She added that about […]

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    After last week’s rapidly intensifying Category 5 storm inundated Mexico’s west coast, many areas still lack power and communication in the Acapulco area, where historic Hurricane Otis made landfall.

    The storm’s death toll has risen to 45 people, and 47 people are still missing, according to Evelyn Salgado, Guerrero state governor. She added that about 274,000 homes throughout the region had been destroyed from the storm’s high winds and flood surges. Clean water shortages and a dwindling food supply are also impacting the region.

    More than 100 hospitals and clinics have been damaged, and medical care is scarce.

    Direct Relief issued $200,000 in financial support last week, including to groups responding in Guerrero with emergency health services.

    Medical Impact, an organization that Direct Relief supported last week with a $25,000 emergency operating grant, deployed 12 doctors to Acapulco to provide medical care in the area. Field medic packs for triage care outside clinic walls and an emergency health kit, which contains medical essentials commonly requested after disasters, are outfitting the medical providers during their trip.

    The week before Hurricane Otis made landfall, Direct Relief had shipped requested medical essentials, including medications for chronic disease management such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and asthma, as well as first aid items for wound care and other medical needs.

    Direct Relief is also coordinating with the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, or IMSS, one of the largest providers of healthcare in the country, and has shared a list of available medications.

    Direct Relief will continue to respond to Hurricane Otis throughout the coming days.

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    Aid Departs for 13 Countries https://www.directrelief.org/2023/10/operational-update-meeting-medical-needs-in-israel-after-terror-attacks-aid-departs-for-13-countries-and-more/ Sat, 14 Oct 2023 12:49:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=75714 Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 455 shipments of requested medical aid to 41 U.S. states and territories and 13 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 11.5 million defined daily doses of medication, including cardiovascular medicines, vitamins, PPE, diabetes supplies, and more. Supporting Medical Needs After Terror Attacks in Israel In response to […]

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    Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 455 shipments of requested medical aid to 41 U.S. states and territories and 13 countries worldwide.

    The shipments contained 11.5 million defined daily doses of medication, including cardiovascular medicines, vitamins, PPE, diabetes supplies, and more.

    Supporting Medical Needs After Terror Attacks in Israel

    The border area in Metulla, Israel, on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2023. (MARCUS YAM / LOS ANGELES TIMES)

    In response to the terror attacks that occurred one week ago in Israel, Direct Relief has committed $1 million to support Israeli organizations providing emergency health and social services, several of which have requested assistance to secure needed health and medical essentials.

    This commitment follows an initial grant announced this week to the Ashkelon Foundation, a nonprofit focused on health and well-being in southern Israel near the border with Gaza.

    The foundation is supporting Barzilai Medical Center, a 600-bed hospital that received 250 patients in the first 12 hours of the attack, fifty of whom were in critical condition.

    In addition to the $1 million in cash assistance, Direct Relief has offered its extensive medical inventories and other resources, including international logistics assistance needed to mobilize additional medications or medical commodities to assist with the crisis in Israel.

    The blockade resulting from the terrorist attack has interrupted the long-established channels through which humanitarian assistance is provided to civilians in Gaza under the supervision and control of Israeli authorities. It is through these approved channels that Direct Relief has provided extensive ongoing humanitarian health assistance in recent years. When authorized humanitarian channels are reestablished to help innocent civilians in Gaza caught in the crossfire, Direct Relief is prepared to assist.

    Read more here.

    Tornadoes Touch Down in Florida

    Tornados swept through areas of west Florida Thursday, with damage reported near the Tampa area, in Citrus, Pinellas and Pasco counties. Several buildings have been significantly damaged, and roads are closed across the region. A clinical site of Langley Health Services, located in Crystal River and which receives Direct Relief support, was destroyed.

    Direct Relief has been in communication with the Florida Association of Community Health Centers, and will offer assistance as needs become known.

    Direct Relief Hosts Emergency Responders for Training

    On Oct. 11, 2023, Direct Relief hosted emergency responders from Los Angeles County EMS Agency Region I, which conducted a training onsite at Direct Relief’s Santa Barbara headquarters. During the session, Direct Relief’s Director of Operations Doug Froelich briefed the group about Direct Relief’s mission and operational capacity.

    Safety-Net Clinics, Primary Care Groups Gather in California

    This week, the National Association of Free and Charitable Clinics convened its 2023 Charitable Healthcare Symposium, which gathered free and charitable clinics from across the U.S. Direct Relief staff attended the conference, including President and CEO Thomas Tighe, who spoke at the closing session for the event on Friday.

    NAFC and its members are part of the nation’s healthcare safety net, and Direct Relief has supported their work with donations of medicines and other medical products, emergency support, and funding. In total, Direct Relief has provided $1 billion in medical aid and $12.5 million in grant funding to hundreds of free & charitable clinics and charitable pharmacies.

    Direct Relief staff also attended the California Primary Care Association’s annual conference in Los Angeles, where staff had the opportunity to connect with health centers across the state. In the past 15 years, Direct Relief has supported health centers in California with 15,300 shipments of prescription medicines and over-the-counter items, collectively valued at $125.7M, and $20.6M in cash grants for disaster response, health equity, and resilient power, and chronic disease management programs.

    Speedrun Colosseum Raises Support for Emergency Response

    More than $35,000 was raised for emergency response efforts after speedrunners convened in Las Vegas for the the second annual Speedrun Colosseum live-streamed gaming event. The event featuring some of the world’s best video game speedrunners and was streamed on Twitch, the leading social video platform and community for gamers.

    This year’s event was hosted by longtime speedrunner Asa “Spikevegeta” Tims and featured 30 of the world’s most talented gamers who perform intense challenges and complete games as quickly as possible, including top performers for the popular new releases Elden Ring and The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom. The event has raised $100,000 for Direct Relief since it began last year.

    OPERATIONAL SNAPSHOT

    WORLDWIDE

    This week, Direct Relief shipped 9.8 million defined daily doses of medication outside the U.S.

    Countries that received medical aid over the past week included:

    • Sri Lanka
    • Uganda
    • Tunisia
    • India
    • Ukraine
    • Türkiye
    • Jordan
    • Democratic Republic of the Congo
    • Haiti
    • Papua New Guinea
    • Kenya
    • Ecuador

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 433 shipments containing more than 8.6 tons of medications over the past week to organizations, including the following:

    • Mission Of Mercy – Arizona Clinics, Arizona
    • Jefferson Comprehensive Health Center, Inc., Mississippi
    • Samaritans Touch Care Center, Inc, Florida
    • Community Care Center, North Carolina
    • Palmetto Health Council, Inc., Georgia
    • Volunteers in Medicine Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
    • Mission Arlington Medical Clinic, Texas
    • Cove House Free Clinic, Texas
    • Good Samaritan Clinic, Arkansas
    • PATHS Community Pharmacy, Virginia

    YEAR-TO-DATE (GLOBAL)

    Since January 1, 2023, Direct Relief has delivered 16,600 shipments to 2,296 healthcare providers in 55 U.S. states and territories and 85 countries.

    These shipments contained 435.8 million defined daily doses of medication valued at $1.7 billion (wholesale), totaling 5.3 million lbs.

    in the news

    Israel–Palestine: How to Help the Victims of This Week’s Deadly Attacks Harper’s Bazaar

    Israel-Hamas conflict: here’s how you can help TimeOut

    Gaza–Israel Conflict: Top-Rated Charities Providing Aid – CharityWatch

    How aid groups are responding to the Israel-Hamas war, and where to donate – ABC 7 Chicago

    The Artists Behind Hypeart’s ‘Love Letters to LA’ Charity ExhibitionHypeArt

    How to help victims of war in Israel, Gaza WPTV

    Here’s how you can help those impacted by the Israel-Hamas war – Boston.com

    How to help victims of the deadly Israel-Hamas conflict ABC News

    Sea Glass Festival donates to Maui relief Coastal View News

    LogiPharma USA 2023: Jenifer Smith Talks About Direct ReliefPharmaceutical Commerce

    Comcast Donating $2M to Support Humanitarian Relief Amid Israel CrisisThe Hollywood Reporter

    How to help relief efforts in Israel, Gaza – DC News Now

    How to Help Civilian Victims of the Israel-Hamas War The Cut

    Israel-Palestine: How to Help the Victims of Yesterday’s Deadly Attack Elle

    Israel-Palestine: How to Help the Victims of the Deadly Attacks Men’s Health

    Trusted charities supporting the citizens of Israel and GazaCool Mom Picks

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    Deadly Earthquakes Rock Afghanistan, Direct Relief Assesses Needs https://www.directrelief.org/2023/10/deadly-earthquakes-rock-afghanistan-direct-relief-assesses-needs/ Tue, 10 Oct 2023 11:57:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=75689 A pair of devastating 6.3-magnitude earthquakes reverberated through western Afghanistan on Saturday, killing thousands and injuring more. The death toll on Monday exceeded 2,400 and the quakes had left entire villages destroyed in the area 20 miles northwest of the city of Herat, located near Afghanistan’s western border with Iran. Direct Relief has provided $16.3 […]

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    A pair of devastating 6.3-magnitude earthquakes reverberated through western Afghanistan on Saturday, killing thousands and injuring more.

    The death toll on Monday exceeded 2,400 and the quakes had left entire villages destroyed in the area 20 miles northwest of the city of Herat, located near Afghanistan’s western border with Iran.

    Direct Relief has provided $16.3 million in medical aid since 2008, including to Afshar Hospital run by the Alliance for Medical Outreach and Relief. Direct Relief last shipped to the group in June 2023, and sent requested multivitamins and personal care items.

    Shipments to the region have occurred on a much more limited basis since the country’s takeover by the Taliban in 2021. Direct Relief is contacting organizations still operating in the country to assess medical needs.

    The organization will respond to requests for medical aid as they become known.

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    Emergency Funding Reaches Midwives in Morocco, Post-Earthquake https://www.directrelief.org/2023/10/emergency-funding-reaches-midwives-in-morocco-post-earthquake/ Thu, 05 Oct 2023 20:13:09 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=75604 Direct Relief today announced $75,000 will be issued to midwives working in Morocco to protect the health of women giving birth and young children in the aftermath of the devastating 6.8-magnitude earthquake that rocked the region earlier this month. Emergencies disproportionately impact certain populations, including pregnant women and very young children. Midwives, trained and equipped […]

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    Direct Relief today announced $75,000 will be issued to midwives working in Morocco to protect the health of women giving birth and young children in the aftermath of the devastating 6.8-magnitude earthquake that rocked the region earlier this month.

    Emergencies disproportionately impact certain populations, including pregnant women and very young children. Midwives, trained and equipped for care, can facilitate safe births outside a hospital setting, which is particularly important when hospitals are scarce or overwhelmed with patients due to disasters.

    Direct Relief supports midwives on an ongoing basis and also during emergencies, including post-disaster after earthquakes in Turkey, Syria, and Indonesia, as well as other disasters. Interruptions in prenatal care, lack of clean water and food access, and the stress of displacement and lack of housing can all impact pregnant women and young children during and after a disaster.

    Two groups will receive funding to support midwifery in the aftermath of the earthquakes. Of the $75,000 disbursed, $50,000 will go to the International Confederation of Midwives, which has chapter organizations of local midwives working in Morocco. Direct Relief is also providing $25,000 to the Association Marocaine des Sages-Femmes, which also represents midwives in the country.

    In the search and rescue phase of the emergency, Direct Relief provided Bomberos Unidos Sin Fronteras (United Firefighters without Borders) with an emergency operating grant of $100,000. The NGO, based in Spain, is conducting search and rescue efforts in Morocco at the request of the Moroccan government.

    Direct Relief is working to help route needed supplies to Morocco. Among the donations in process, in coordination with a local manufacturer and The High Atlas Foundation, are 20,000 units of requested nutritionals for affected communities in Morocco. The High Atlas Foundation has a long history of working in Morocco’s mountainous communities near the earthquake’s epicenter.

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    Supporting Physical and Financial Health in Mississippi https://www.directrelief.org/2023/09/supporting-physical-and-financial-health-in-mississippi/ Tue, 05 Sep 2023 12:00:00 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=73901 Health providers screening for the social determinants of health — information about the conditions of a person’s life, from housing and transportation to access to clean air and water –is nothing new. Adding a picture of a person’s financial health and stressors, like debt burden, is a new angle. It’s one the Aaron E. Henry […]

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    Health providers screening for the social determinants of health — information about the conditions of a person’s life, from housing and transportation to access to clean air and water — is nothing new. Adding a picture of a person’s financial health and stressors, like debt burden, is a new angle.

    It’s one the Aaron E. Henry Community Health Center is asking about to help their patients more holistically. It’s also the goal of the center’s Health Wealth program to address financial insecurity and its direct impact on health.

    The federally qualified health center is located in Clarksdale, Mississippi, and has served the community for over 40 years. The center operates 12 sites and provides medical and dental care services, behavioral health services and more. The center began the Health Wealth program after gathering input from people across six counties to hear about obstacles to health outcomes in the community. Addressing all barriers to better health, including financial ones, was listed as a need.

    So clinic staff and staff from Southern Bancorp worked to modify the clinic’s social determinants of health patient screening tool by adding questions about banking status, debt burden, and other indicators of financial distress. If patients say they’re interested, they can meet with a credit counselor on-site at the clinic.

    Aaron E. Henry received $100,000 from Direct Relief’s Fund for Health Equity, via the AbbVie Foundation, to launch the program with the goal that it serves patients across the Mississippi Delta, and could be replicated in health centers across the U.S.

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    West Coasts of U.S., Mexico Brace for Hurricane Hilary https://www.directrelief.org/2023/08/operational-update-west-coasts-of-u-s-mexico-brace-for-hurricane-hilary/ Fri, 18 Aug 2023 18:08:27 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=74630 Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 416 shipments of requested medical aid to 42 U.S. states and territories and 12 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 10.8 million defined daily doses of medication, including first aid kits, vitamins, PPE, antibiotics, and more. Emergency Medicines Dispatched to Baja Ahead of Hurricane Hilary Hurricane Hilary, […]

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    Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 416 shipments of requested medical aid to 42 U.S. states and territories and 12 countries worldwide.

    The shipments contained 10.8 million defined daily doses of medication, including first aid kits, vitamins, PPE, antibiotics, and more.

    Emergency Medicines Dispatched to Baja Ahead of Hurricane Hilary

    Emergency medicines and medical backpacks are dispatched to Baja on Aug. 18, 2023, in reponse to Hurricane Hilary. (Eduardo Mendoza/Direct Relief)

    Hurricane Hilary, expected to make landfall as a Category 1 storm in Baja over the weekend, has communities bracing for impact. In advance of the storm, Direct Relief has been in communication with state and local organizations in Mexico about potential medical needs. Recently, Direct Relief provided 18 emergency medical backpacks to the State of Baja to equip first responders, and the packs contain medical essentials for triage care outside of clinic walls. The packs, provided with support from FedEx, were requested as the region endures seasonal wildfires and is frequently affected by hurricanes like Hilary.

    On Friday, Direct Relief dispatched another infusion of medical support to Baja, including 10 emergency medical backpacks and an emergency health kit, which contains essential medicines and supplies often requested after hurricanes and other disasters. The shipment is en route to Fundacion Astra in Baja California Sur, a nonprofit that delivers acute and preventive health services to vulnerable populations, including children, at-risk youth, mothers, the injured, the chronically ill and the elderly. Direct Relief is also sending an emergency health kit to the Tijuana Civil Protection Agency in coordination with the State of Baja California.

    Emergency medicines and medical backpacks were dispatched to Baja on Aug. 18, 2023, in response to Hurricane Hilary. (Eduardo Mendoza/Direct Relief)

    Direct Relief was incorporated in Mexico as a Civil Association in 2014 and has been an authorized donee since 2015. As the only humanitarian wholesale distributor of pharmaceuticals operating in Mexico that is fully compliant with COFEPRIS regulations, it can receive in-country and process internationally donated goods and is positioned to respond to both immediate public health requirements and long-term healthcare service needs in underserved communities.

    In the United States, many areas of California are under flood watches and warnings due to Hilary’s projected path. Direct Relief has opened communications with the California Primary Association, the California Association of Free and Charitable Clinics, Healthcare Partners of Southern California, the Coalition of Orange County Community Clinics, Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County to coordinate any medical needs that become known.

    The organization will continue responding to medical needs from Hurricane Hilary as they become known.

    Response to Fires in Hawai‘i Underway

    Medical aid departs for local organizations responding to the Maui fires on August 17, 2023. Project Vision, the Maui Humane Society, Imua Family Services and Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawaii were all included in the shipment, which contained N-95 masks, requested medicines, emergency medical backpacks, and portable coolers for temperature-sensitive medications. (Lara Cooper/Direct Relief)

    On Thursday, shipments departed for groups in Maui, including Project Vision Hawaii, a nonprofit that operates 10 mobile health screening units across Hawai’i. A wildfire response kit, with medical essentials including chronic disease management medications, respiratory therapies, and other essentials, departed for the group, as well as N-95 masks.

    N-95 masks and goggles also departed for Maui Emergency Management. Imua Family Services, an organization providing emergency childcare and therapy services for those impacted by the fires, also will receive 500 N-95 respirator masks from Thursday’s shipments. Portable refrigeration units for temperature-sensitive medications were also shipped out to Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i.

    To date, Direct Relief has sent over 2,500 lbs. of specifically requested medicines and supplies to address health concerns that commonly arise during fires and mass evacuations. In addition to the groups supported Thursday, these shipments support the relief efforts of Malama I Ke Ola Health Center (Community Clinic of Maui), Maui Search and Rescue, and Hawai’i Island Community Health Center.

    Direct Relief has also disbursed $200,000 in direct cash assistance in the form of $50,000 emergency operating grants each to Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawaii, Malama I Ke Ola Health Center (Community Clinic of Maui), Maui Search and Rescue, and Hui No Ke Ola Pono (Native Hawai’ian Health Center.)

    OPERATIONAL SNAPSHOT

    WORLDWIDE

    This week, Direct Relief shipped 7.1 million defined daily doses of medication outside the U.S.

    Countries that received medical aid over the past week included:

    • Pakistan
    • Lebanon
    • Sri Lanka
    • Ukraine
    • India
    • Nepal
    • Syria
    • Ecuador
    • Macedonia
    • Uganda

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 388 shipments containing more than 9,067 pounds of medications over the past week to organizations, including the following:

    • Welvista, South Carolina
    • NC MedAssist, North Carolina
    • Open Door Health Center, Florida
    • Center for Family Health and Education, California
    • St. Vincent de Paul Pharmacy, Texas
    • Tarzana Treatment Center, California
    • Greenville Free Medical Clinic, South Carolina
    • CommunityHealth, Illinois
    • UNC Health Care, North Carolina
    • Mayflower Clinic, Kansas

    YEAR-TO-DATE (GLOBAL)

    Since Jan. 1, 2023, Direct Relief has delivered 12,800 shipments to 2,100 healthcare providers in 55 U.S. states and territories and 79 countries.

    These shipments contained 352 million defined daily doses of medication valued at $1.3 billion (wholesale), totaling 4.2 million lbs.

    in the news

    Maui Fire Survivors are Battling Shock, Anxiety, and Post-Traumatic Stress—Many Without Medication or Mental Health Care – Associated Press: “Global medical aid organization Direct Relief has been working with groups like Lucio’s to distribute medication to people who fled without their antidepressants and antipsychotic prescriptions, said its director of pharmacy and clinical affairs, Alycia Clark. In a natural disaster, people often leave their medication behind during sudden evacuations. Downed cellphone towers and power outages can prevent them from contacting their doctors, and damage to health care clinics and a lack of transportation can all combine to complicate medical access, she said.”

    Relief Donations Starting to Trickle into Hawaii Following Deadly Fires – Fox Weather: “Direct Relief said some donations and supplies have started to arrive in Maui following deadly fires in Hawaii almost one week ago.”

    ‘This Comes from the Heart’: How Volunteers Help Lahaina Amid Slow Government Response – The Guardian: “The California-based humanitarian nonprofit worked with local groups to bring requested items to the Island – PPE, insulin, nebulizers and hygiene items, among others. Upon landing, members immediately shuffled into vans to deliver medical supplies to distribution hubs in Lahaina, and wildfire kits for the local Maui search-and-Rescue group.”

    How People Can Help Maui Wildfire Victims – Noozhawk: “Direct Relief, which is headquartered in Goleta, has been sending medical aid and financial assistance to Maui since the fires began. The nonprofit organization focuses on helping community health centers by supplying medicine and aid so medical professionals can better treat their patients. For people who want to help Maui residents with monetary donations, Chris Alleway, Emergency Response Manager for Direct Relief, suggests that everyone research organizations they trust when deciding to donate financially to help Maui wildfire victims.”

    Direct Relief Provides Aid to Hawaii in Response to Deadly Wildfires – Pacific Coast Business Times: “Direct Relief CEO Thomas Tighe said while federal and state aid will be needed for clearing public areas and rebuilding infrastructure, the immediate support needed by people is best met by “fast-moving non-profits.””

    From Santa Barbara to Maui: Aid Shipments Being Sent to the Island to Help Wildfire Victims – KCLU: “The 75-year-old non-profit is known for helping people hit by disasters, and crisis around the world with medicine, and medical supplies. Direct Relief has been sending aid to Maui for the last week, including a major shipment over the weekend.”

    Home Improvement Center Launches Matching Donation Drive to Help Victims of the Maui Fires – KEYT: “The ACE Home Improvement Center in Santa Barbara is collaborating with Direct Relief to help the victims of the Maui fires. Beginning today the Home Improvement Center will take customer donations directly or take a donation in the form of rounding up a transaction to the next whole dollar. Owner Gary Simpson says the goal is to match the donations and raise $10,000 in the next week. That money will go to the non-profit Direct Relief to help with badly needed medical supplies in Lahaina. Many shipments have already arrived.”

    Santa Barbara–Born Maui Resident Among Volunteers Helping Those Displaced by Deadly Wildfires – Santa Barbara Independent: “From the Central Coast, Santa Barbara–based charity Direct Relief is mobilizing assistance to those in need in Maui, delivering medical supplies, hygiene products, and lifesaving equipment, as well as working directly with health-care providers and emergency responders to offer supplies and support for the injured and those suffering from smoke-related health issues.”

    The post West Coasts of U.S., Mexico Brace for Hurricane Hilary appeared first on Direct Relief.

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    With the Fires Contained in Many Areas, Medical Needs Remain in Maui https://www.directrelief.org/2023/08/with-the-fires-contained-in-many-areas-medical-needs-remain-in-maui/ Wed, 16 Aug 2023 22:14:20 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=74621 The impact of the deadly wind-driven fires on Maui is coming into heartbreaking focus this week as the search and recovery efforts continue. About 27 percent of the impacted area has been searched, according to officials, and the death toll rose officially to 106 people this week. Thousands remain displaced from their homes on the […]

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    The impact of the deadly wind-driven fires on Maui is coming into heartbreaking focus this week as the search and recovery efforts continue. About 27 percent of the impacted area has been searched, according to officials, and the death toll rose officially to 106 people this week.

    Thousands remain displaced from their homes on the island, and though the fires are moving towards full containment, health risks remain, beyond burns and injuries from the initial blaze.

    Health providers on the island are working to keep people out of medical crisis and connected with medications needed to manage chronic diseases, like diabetes and high blood pressure.

    A stream of medical aid aimed at those needs has been pulsed out of Direct Relief’s warehouse since last week, and Direct Relief’s Director of Pharmacy and Clinical Affairs Alycia Clark has been coordinating with local medical providers to understand their needs and quickly ship them requested medications.

    Disasters that displace people from their homes often interrupt access to medications needed to manage their health, and Clark said that the primary requests from health providers continue to be respiratory medications, insulin, and antibiotics.

    “The goal is to complement the work of providers and officials on the ground by providing essential medications and supplies that may be in short supply due to the nature of the disaster, and to prevent emergency room visits when services are overwhelmed, and transportation barriers may be present,” Clark said.

    In response to the devastating fires in Maui, Clark said that Direct Relief is sending products to address the main health issues that commonly arise during fires and mass evacuations. Those include inhalers, nebulizer solutions, and masks for respiratory irritation and to control asthma. Irrigation solutions and antibiotics for dermal and ophthalmic injuries, analgesics for pain from minor injuries and headaches are also included, as well as wound care items for cuts, sprains, and strains, and personal care items, including soap and toothpaste for displaced individuals in shelters.

    Clark said that her team has also been in contact with various associations about specific medical needs, including the American Society of Nephrology, Hawai’ian Medical Association, Society of Critical Care Medicine, as well as individual providers and heads of hospitals, to assess what patients may be needing.

    Certain types of insulin are temperature-sensitive and require consistent temperatures while in transit, and Direct Relief shipped requested amounts of insulin this week to Malama I Ke Ola Health Center (Community Clinic of Maui) via cold shippers. The clinic also received inhalers, diabetes medications, cardiovascular treatments, anti-infectives, and other requested medications.

    Since the fires broke out, Direct Relief has sent over 2,500 lbs. of specifically requested medicines and supplies to address health concerns commonly arising during fires and mass evacuations. These shipments support the relief efforts of four organizations:

    • Community Clinic of Maui (Malama I Ke Ola Health Center)
    • Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i
    • Maui Search and Rescue
    • Hawai’i Island Community Health Center

    In addition to medical support, Direct Relief is immediately disbursing $200,000 into four $50,000 grants to help fund operations by local medical responders.

    • Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i
    • Malama I Ke Ola Health Center (Community Clinic of Maui)
    • Maui Search and Rescue
    • Hui No Ke Ola Pono (Native Hawai’ian Health Center)

    The organization will continue responding to needs throughout the immediate, near-term and long-term phases of the recovery.

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    Medical Supplies for Maui Search and Rescue, Shelter Care Prepped for Departure https://www.directrelief.org/2023/08/medical-supplies-for-maui-search-and-rescue-shelter-care-prepped-for-departure/ Fri, 11 Aug 2023 20:41:07 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=74474 The death toll has continued to rise in Maui, where at least 55 are dead after catastrophic wind-driven fires swept through communities this week, including Lahaina, about 80 percent of which has been reported destroyed. More than 1,000 people were recorded in shelters across Maui and Honolulu on Thursday, and Direct Relief is focused on […]

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    The death toll has continued to rise in Maui, where at least 55 are dead after catastrophic wind-driven fires swept through communities this week, including Lahaina, about 80 percent of which has been reported destroyed.

    More than 1,000 people were recorded in shelters across Maui and Honolulu on Thursday, and Direct Relief is focused on meeting immediate medical needs, including those of evacuated people staying in shelters, and supporting search and rescue efforts.

    Officials survey damage in Maui on Aug. 11, 2023. More than 50 people have died as a result of the fires, and search and rescue continues. (County of Maui photo)

    The organization is preparing an air support flight for Maui, with a planned departure from Los Angeles on Saturday morning. The flight will contain wildfire response kits, emergency medical backpacks, N-95 masks and more.

    Included in upcoming shipments are 20 emergency medical backpacks for Maui Search and Rescue, which has requested the packs to assist volunteer search and rescue teams working to locate those still missing from fires.

    The organization has also committed $500,000 in financial support for emergency response and recovery needs.

    A shipment of N-95 masks, hygiene kits, and other medical products are packed and staged for shipment to Maui on Friday morning. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

    Direct Relief has been in contact with health providers, including those providing care at the War Memorial Complex in Lahaina, where people have sought shelter. Pharmacists operating in the shelter have reported a need for prescription medications, including albuterol inhalers and other requests for respiratory medications. Antibiotics, skin creams, and other medications were requested and fulfilled Friday.

    Direct Relief is also communicating with the Society of Critical Care Medicine, a group supporting high-quality critical care with members in 85 countries. SCCM is in contact with health facilities providing trauma care on the Hawai’ian Islands about medical needs.

    Earlier this week, local organization Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawai’i, received medical aid from Direct Relief to support medical care in Maui shelters and community outreach.

    The organization has a mobile unit that has been deployed to provide supportive care to those who are pregnant and post-partum, newborns, and their families.

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    Critical Aid Dispatched for Wildfire First Responders in Maui https://www.directrelief.org/2023/08/critical-aid-dispatched-for-wildfire-first-responders-in-maui/ Thu, 10 Aug 2023 17:58:03 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=74400 Emergency medical aid requested by first responders in Maui is en route to the island as wildfires raged Thursday. At least 36 people have been killed as a result of the fires, officials said, and thousands have been evacuated from their homes and remain without power. On Wednesday, emergency shipments containing emergency medical backpacks for […]

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    Emergency medical aid requested by first responders in Maui is en route to the island as wildfires raged Thursday. At least 36 people have been killed as a result of the fires, officials said, and thousands have been evacuated from their homes and remain without power.

    On Wednesday, emergency shipments containing emergency medical backpacks for triage care departed for Maui, Oahu, and the Big Island. Respiratory medications, N-95 masks, and chronic disease management medications also departed from Direct Relief’s California warehouse for the islands.

    The organization has opened up its $360 million (wholesale) medical inventory in California for emergency response and will fulfill medical requests.

    Medical shipments are on the way to local organizations, including Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition of Hawaii, a group responding to needs, including those of pregnant women, newborns, and their families that have been displaced or impacted by the fires.

    A shipment for the group departed Wednesday and included emergency medical backpacks, for triage care outside of clinic walls, and a wildfire response kit, specifically built with medical essentials commonly requested during wildfires, which includes respiratory medications and PPE.

    Direct Relief has a long history of responding to wildfires and has refined a wildfire response kit that can be quickly dispatched to first responders on the ground. The kit contains PPE, respiratory medications, nebulizers, ophthalmic treatments, chronic disease medications, and more. A wildfire response kit was shipped Wednesday to Healthy Mothers, Health Babies Coalition of Hawaii, a local organization deploying to shelters and communities impacted by fires. (Photo by Erin Feinblatt for Direct Relief)

    More than 300 personal care kits, with hygiene items, including soap and toothpaste, for people displaced due to evacuation, have also been sent.

    Shipments will continue this week, and Direct Relief is in contact with the Hawaii Department of Health, the Federal Administration for Strategic Preparedness & Response (ASPR) Region 9, the Hawaii Primary Care Association, and more than 15 other healthcare facilities in Hawaii in response to the recent outbreak of wildfires.

    In addition to acute medical issues such as burns and smoke inhalation, wildfires can also prompt mass evacuations, creating further health risks. When people are suddenly displaced from their homes, they may leave without critical medications to manage chronic conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure. If unmanaged, these conditions can escalate, leaving the person requiring emergency care at a time when urgent care centers and emergency rooms are already inundated.

    Fires can also create massive power outages (about 13,000 service addresses are currently without power on Maui, according to poweroutage.us), leaving large amounts of people without electricity, which can be deadly for those dependent on medical devices, including ventilators and medical oxygen.

    Direct Relief will continue to respond to medical needs as requested.

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    Search and Rescue Vehicle Unveiled, Flood Response in the U.S., and More https://www.directrelief.org/2023/07/operational-update-search-and-rescue-vehicle-unveiled-flood-response-in-the-u-s-and-more/ Fri, 14 Jul 2023 18:12:31 +0000 https://www.directrelief.org/?p=73867 Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 457 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 10 countries worldwide. The shipments contained 11.4 million defined daily doses of medication, including first aid kits, vitamins, cardiovascular medicines, antibiotics, and more. New Search and Rescue Vehicle Unveiled This week, a specialized […]

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    Over the past seven days, Direct Relief has delivered 457 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 10 countries worldwide.

    The shipments contained 11.4 million defined daily doses of medication, including first aid kits, vitamins, cardiovascular medicines, antibiotics, and more.

    New Search and Rescue Vehicle Unveiled

    This week, a specialized vehicle was unveiled at Direct Relief headquarters to strengthen search and rescue operations in Santa Barbara County, California, where Direct Relief is based. The Santa Barbara County Search and Rescue team, a group of volunteers that operates under the auspices of the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Department, is often called upon to conduct rescue and recovery missions throughout the county, including the steep terrain of the Santa Ynez mountains.

    Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown and members of the Santa Barbara County Search and Rescue Team unveil the new search and rescue truck at Direct Relief headquarters on July 13, 2023. The truck was purchased through the support of Direct Relief’s Search and Rescue Fund. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

    The vehicle can access flooded areas because of its high clearance and 40-inch wheels, and has specialized features, like 600-foot ropes for mountain rescues, and will enable the rescue team to access hard-to-reach areas during times of disaster or rescue calls in challenging conditions. The truck was funded by Direct Relief’s Search and Rescue Fund, established during winter storms this year in California. Direct Relief mobilized private resources to help equip search and rescue volunteers throughout California with the necessary gear and equipment. The initial focus will support SARs in the six counties that were identified this year under the Presidential Major Disaster Declaration: Merced, Monterey, Sacramento, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Santa Cruz. The organization also purchased a high-water rescue vehicle for the California Office of Emergency Services (CalOES), which is responsible for SAR units in Ventura, Santa Barbara, and San Luis Obispo Counties. This vehicle will be a shared resource among the three units.

    Five years ago, after the 1/9 Montecito Debris Flow in Santa Barbara County, Direct Relief purchased vehicles and equipment for a number of first responder agencies, including UTVs, specialized rescue gear, and a new rescue truck for Santa Barbara County SAR. These vehicles and equipment were critical in their efforts to get to people who were injured or stranded after the devastating event.

    Medical Aid Departs for Flooded Vermont

    Medical aid departs for Rutland County Free Clinic in Rutland, Vermont, which has been impacted by flooding in recent days. Essential medications and personal care items for people who have been displaced were included in the shipment. (Brea Burkholz/Direct Relief)

    Shipments to flooded communities in Vermont departed Direct Relief’s warehouse Thursday, and included essential medications to manage conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure, as well as hygiene items for people displaced from their homes due to the floodwaters. More than 100 people were rescued from floodwaters this week as rivers rose, inundating communities throughout the state.

    The Rutland County Free Clinic, located in Rutland, Vermont, serves uninsured adults living in the area, which was badly flooded. Some areas of the community are reachable only by helicopter, but clinic staff is working to provide outreach in accessible areas, and working to connect patients with needed medications, including those in local shelters.

    On Thursday, Direct Relief shipped an emergency health kit, filled with essential items often requested for medical needs during and after disasters occur. The clinic also requested five field medic packs, which contain first aid items needed to provide medical care outside of clinic walls.

    Vitamins, medications for high blood pressure, steroids and other medications were also shipped to the clinic. Fifty personal care kits, filled with items like soap and shampoo, were also shipped for people who have been displaced from their homes.

    Midwife Kits Reach Birthing Center in Malawi

    Direct Relief-donated Midwife Kits arrived recently at Pothawira Birthing Center, in Salima, Malawi. The birthing center provides obstetric and neonatal services in the region, and includes a women’s shelter where women can await their labor and delivery.

    Dr. Anne Alaniz cares for a newborn at Pothawira Birthing Center in Malawi. The center recently received Midwife Kits from Direct Relief, which contain items to assist with safe births. (Courtesy photo)

    Dr. Anne Alaniz, co-founder of the Pothawira Project, which operates the birthing center, reported that the recently received Midwife Kits, which contain over 50 essential items to assist with safe births, have helped the facility increase capacity and serve more women.

    OPERATIONAL SNAPSHOT

    WORLDWIDE

    This week, Direct Relief shipped 9.5 million defined daily doses of medication outside the U.S.

    Countries that received medical aid over the past week included:

    • Ukraine
    • Fiji
    • Uganda
    • Malawi
    • Philippines
    • Syria
    • Bangladesh
    • Liberia
    • Haiti
    • Dominican Republic

    UNITED STATES

    Direct Relief delivered 443 shipments containing more than 11 tons of medications over the past week to organizations, including the following:

    • Clearwater Free Clinic, Florida
    • The Health Hut, Louisiana
    • Sierra Health Center – Fullerton, California
    • The Naloxone Project, Colorado
    • Eunice Community Health Center, Louisiana
    • Community Health Northwest Florida, Florida
    • St. Petersburg Free Clinic, Florida
    • Health Partners Free Clinic, Ohio
    • Madison Free Clinic, Virginia
    • Virginia Harm Reduction Coalition, Virginia

    YEAR-TO-DATE (GLOBAL)

    Since Jan. 1, 2023, Direct Relief has delivered 10,100 shipments to 1,955 healthcare providers in 55 U.S. states and territories and 71 countries.

    These shipments contained 299 million defined daily doses of medication valued at $1.1 billion (wholesale), totaling 3.6 million lbs.

    in the news

    KEYT: New search and rescue vehicle unveiled at Direct Relief Headquarters

    Santa Barbara News-Press: Designed to Save Lives“A new, custom-designed truck — complete with spools of 600 feet of thick ropes and other special features — is making it easier for search-and-rescue volunteers to save lives in Santa Barbara County. The new Ford F-450 truck has been used since February by the Santa Barbara County Search and Rescue Team. And it was officially unveiled on a sunny Thursday afternoon outside the Direct Relief headquarters in Goleta.”

    Fox Weather: Aid Organizations Prepare for Disaster Responses Summer weather patterns can lead to extreme events, including floods and hurricanes. A look at how aid organizations prepare for disaster response.

    Santa Barbara Independent: Santa Barbara Airport Terminal Improvement Project Open House July 18: “The community is invited to join Santa Barbara Airport (SBA) for an informational open house regarding the proposed Terminal Improvement Project [at Direct Relief headquarters].”

    Rabies Vaccines Arrive in Northwestern Syria: “The US organization Direct Relief recently provided northwestern Syria with a quantity of rabies and tetanus vaccines as part of the necessary medical aid to areas still suffering from the effects of the February 6 earthquake.

    US NGOs Donate Medicines Worth Over US$53.3 mn (Colombo, Sri Lanka): “A stock of medicines worth US$ 53.3 million needed for cancer patients and children was handed over to Health Minister Keheliya Rambukwella by US Ambassador in Colombo Julie Chung yesterday. This stock of medicine includes about 16 types of medicines for skin diseases among small children, arthritis and cancer. This stock of medicine was donated by US-based NGOs Medical Help International and Direct Relief.”

    More Than 100,000 Usage Sessions Recorded Per Year in the Dobrobut Mobile Application: “Dobrobut medical network launched a mobile application in 2016. The application allows you to access digital medical services on your phone: making an appointment with a doctor at any medical center “Dobrobut”, viewing advisory opinions, research results, paying for services, making an appointment for an online doctor’s explanation and much more. Thanks to cooperation with international charitable organizations Direct Relief International, Children of War Foundation, International Medical Corps and University of Miami Global Institute, as well as thanks to the work of the charitable foundation of the Dobrobut Foundation network, the network’s clinics, which continued their work even during hostilities, provided a significant part of medical services free of charge for months.”

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