Red Cross Talks Blog Update

We wanted to share some news with our loyal blog readers and followers. The Red Cross Talks blog has been revamped, redesigned and has moved to a new web address: www.redcross.ca/blog!

We’ve moved the blog from the WordPress platform to the main Canadian Red Cross website and we hope you’ll follow us there. We invite you to re-subscribe to the blog via RSS or by email so you can read the latest posts and get the most up-to-date information on what’s going on at the Canadian Red Cross.

Thanks from all of us at Red Cross Talks

The Red Cross Round-up

The Round-up offers a weekly sample of what our sister Red Cross Societies are working on around the world.

IRELAND: In 10 of 14 prisons in Ireland, a small group of special-status Irish Red Cross volunteers combines an innovative community-based health approach with the Red Cross Red Crescent Fundamentalpage_16 Principles to change the lives of troubled men, transform prison culture, reduce violence and improve the physical and psychological health of inmates. Since the CBHFA (Community Based Health and First Aid) program was put in place, the percentage of fights involving an illicit, handmade blade has gone down from 97 per cent to 10 per cent in one year. The result has been fewer injuries and reduced prison health-care costs. The program is active in 10 prisons in Ireland, and is due to be extended to all 14 prisons. It has recruited 326 inmates as Irish Red Cross special-status volunteers who have helped to improve the lives of more than 3,279 of their fellow prisoners and the prison staff.

LIBYA: A training seminar on the treatment of wounds caused by mines, bullets, shrapnel and other weapons was recently held in Benghazi. Organized jointly by the Libyan Ministry of Health, the Libyan Red Crescent Society and the ICRC, the two-day seminar brought together 120 doctors from different parts of Libya. The seminar is an opportunity for leading Libyan surgeons to exchange experiences and best practices with ICRC specialists. In addition, they discuss the problems they face when treating casualties of armed conflict or violence, often with limited resources.

GLOSSARY:
ICRC = International Committee of the Red Cross

Continuing to support health needs in Haiti

maquette haiti hospital

Today marked a very special celebration for the Canadian Red Cross and Haitian Red Cross. Almost four years after the January 2010 earthquake, as a part of the Canadian Red Cross’ Haitian Integrated Health Program, the cornerstone at the Saint-Michel hospital in Jacmel was laid.

Working with the Ministry of Public Health and Population, and with financial support of the American Red Cross, the hospital reconstruction project aims to  build back a better healthcare system to improve the health of vulnerable groups, which include mothers, children, and those affected by the earthquake.

This is the beginning of phase one of three reconstruction phases of the Saint-Michel hospital. The photo above is a scale model of the hospital.

Learn more about the Canadian Red Cross’ Haitian Integrated Health Program.

Video update from the Philippines

Dr. Danielle Perreault is a Canadian Red Cross delegate working at the field hospital in Ormoc, Philippines as a member of the medical team. In this short video, she explains how she is also doing outreach in communities impacted by Typhoon Haiyan last month to ensure their health care needs are being met.

Dr. Perreault is a family physician with a practice in Montreal and over 29 years of experience. Like other delegates, she has received extensive training as a member of the Emergency Response Unit (ERU) team prior to being deployed.

It has been a month since the powerful storm caused widespread devastation affecting over 11 million people in the Philippines. You can read our most recent update here and support on-going Red Cross efforts on the ground by donating to the Typhoon Haiyan Fund.

Photo of the Day: Six-Year-Old Fundraiser Takes On Typhoon Haiyan!

Typhoon Haiyan Fundraiser

Owen (centre) along with his brother (Isaac), sister (Alexis) and parents (Sarah and Mark Williams) and the provincial director of the Red Cross in Nova Scotia, Ismael Aquino.

When Owen Williams’ mom told him about the damage caused by Typhoon Haiyan, the six year old immediately emptied his piggy bank to donate the seven dollars he had saved. Owen figured that since he had a home and the people in the Philippines lost theirs, he had to do something. Doubting his piggy bank stash would be enough for a new home, he wrote a letter to his teacher and asked his grade one classmates at Waverley Memorial Elementary School in Nova Scotia to each bring in a dollar, raising another $149. Figuring he could do even more, Owen contacted family members for help and raised a grand total of $476.33 which he brought himself to the Canadian Red Cross head office in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia last week. Thanks for your support, Owen!

The Red Cross Round-up

The Round-up offers a weekly sample of what our sister Red Cross Societies are working on around the world.

nelson mandela

South Africa: It is with sadness that we bid farewell to a man who dedicated his life to advancing the cause of equality for all of humanity. In 2006, the South African Red Cross Society honoured Nobel Peace Prize winner Nelson Mandela as their first humanitarian award recipient for his outstanding achievement on humanitarian issues. Nelson Mandela, a former political prisoner and later the first black President of South Africa, inspired millions in his quest for a more equal world, where people and institutions co-exist through global cooperation and a multilateral approach to dealing with problems, conflicts and challenges. Visit the IFRC to read a special tribute dedicated to Nelson Mandela.

Indonesia: More than 70 per cent of Timor-Leste’s population lives in rural communities, often in extremely isolated conditions with little access to formal health care. People need to walk a day or more to get to a health clinic, meaning that those too ill to make the trip must stay and take their chances.

The Red Cross Red Crescent community-based health and first aid (CBHFA) approach is a simple and effective concept where members of a community are trained on basic health care and first aid so they, in turn, can support their neighbours. It has been especially effective in the rural community of Timor-Leste. Through community-based health and first aid, communities become empowered with information and knowledge on health issues. The CBHFA approach is effective not only because it improves the health and well-being of people in the community; it also works because it builds a strong sense of community.

CBHFA activities, which include water and sanitation, disaster risk reduction and a livelihood component, have been implemented in 12 of Timor-Leste’s 13 districts, through 35 CBHFA trained facilitators. An estimated 50,000 people have been reached so far through this programme.

 

GLOSSARY:

IFRC= International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies

Volunteer Spotlight: Kelly Turner in Calgary

Kelly Turner Volunteer

Kelly Turner started volunteering with the Canadian Red Cross two and a half years ago after assisting in an online group to help the victims of a flood in North Dakota. Since then, she has been deployed to disasters across the country to help provide relief. In addition to a fire in Timmins, flooding in Thunder Bay, and the mall collapse in Elliott Lake, Kelly has been in volunteering in Calgary since June 25th to help respond to the damage caused by flooding. Since arriving there she was worked with the operations team in Mission (one of the hardest hit areas), at a call centre during early recovery efforts, and is now working as a recovery case worker in High River. Kelly is happy to be able to stay in Alberta to see the transition from relief into recovery and shares one of the more memorable moments in her time in High River:

In High River I met a stoic 6 year old child. Her mother said she had not spoken since all of her stuffed animals drowned in the flood. I took a bear off the red Cross table and approached her with the bear whispering in my ear. “This one?” I asked the bear. She looked at me strangely. I bent down to her level and said “Excuse me, are you 6?” She nodded. “This bear lost his family in the flood and he wants to know if he can live with you?” Her eyes filled with tears as she took him from my arms and hugged him. As I walked away she was telling him “I know exactly how you feel, I lost my family too.” It made me realize that every flood victim is a 6 year old child seeking the one thing that allows them comfort, no matter what that may be. I am grateful for the opportunity to have met this family. They did far more for me than I could ever have done for them!

More than 1,000 volunteers from across Canada have been mobilized to help respond to the flooding in Alberta. As winter weather has arrived, Red Cross volunteers are working to help provide furnaces, hot water tanks, and other essential items for heating for homeowners impacted by the June flooding through the Winter Emergency Heat Program.

Photo of the Day: Red Cross Volunteers Show What Voluntary Service Looks Like

Red Cross Red Crescent

Photo Credit: IFRC

Today, December 5, we celebrate International Volunteer Day with a heartfelt thank you to all our volunteers!  We wanted to share this photo that symbolizes this tremendous volunteer commitment.Over 800 Australian Red Cross volunteers recently gathered outside the Sydney Opera House in a giant formation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent emblems as a representation of the Fundamental Principles of Humanity and Voluntary Service. The act marked the opening of the bi-annual statutory meetings of delegates from the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement to discuss humanitarian issues and the future direction of the Red Cross Red Crescent. You can find more information about these meetings on ifrc.org.

Dispatch from the Philippines: “If it was easy, someone else would have done it”

Gwen Eamer, a delegate with the Canadian Red Cross, is currently deployed to Ormoc, Philippines. You can support Red Cross efforts in the Philippines by donating to the Typhoon Haiyan Fund

When we arrived in Ormoc, on the hard-hit island of Leyte, more than two weeks ago, no one quite knew what to expect. We knew that the Red Cross’ emergency response unit (ERU) was being deployed to support the Ormoc District Hospital, which had been badly damaged by Typhoon Haiyan, and that we would have some long days ahead of us.

We arrived by boat to a seaside town, where, even from the dock, the typhoon’s power was evident. Officials here estimate that 97% of the district’s roofs were damaged or destroyed by the storm. Homes, businesses and critical infrastructure like hospitals and schools were all damaged. Shops were shuttered, roads were blocked, streets were quiet. This was a town in shock.

The region’s health needs were pressing. The district hospital, the only public facility serving 190,000 people in Ormoc and surrounding communities,  was hit head-on by Haiyan, tearing off the roof, shattering windows, and destroying equipment.

When we arrived, the hospital could treat only 20 or 30 patients per day, and there was no surgery available for the many labouring women in case they had complications delivering their babies. Patients lined the benches of the lobby and halls, as the exhausted staff – who were themselves affected by the storm – worked around the clock, without electricity, to provide medical care.

ERU team members got to work to set up the field hospital when they first arrived in Ormoc

ERU team members quickly got to work to set up the field hospital when they first arrived in Ormoc a few weeks ago.

The ERU team quickly got to work building our tented field hospital, and 48 hours after we unpacked our first box, we began accepting patients. Today, more than two weeks later, we are still operating at 100% capacity every day. We’ve delivered more than 150 babies, conducted more than 50 surgeries, and seen hundreds of pediatric and adult patients come through our wards.

Patients quickly filled the hospital wards in Ormoc.

Patients quickly filled the wards at the Red Cross field hospital in Ormoc.

Much has changed in the weeks since we arrived. The streets are lively as shops reopen, children begin returning to still-damaged schools, and infrastructure is being repaired. The signs of early recovery are everywhere, but for the many families who lost their homes or livelihoods, the emergency continues and the hard work will continue for many months to come.

A young boy being treated at the Red Cross field hospital in Ormoc playing with a balloon.

A young boy being treated at the Red Cross field hospital in Ormoc playing with a balloon.

As the first group of ERU personnel begins planning to hand over to our replacements, we look back on what we’ve accomplished here, and the hard work it took. But as our second-in-command likes to tell us, “if it was easy, someone else would have done it.”

Celebrate Giving Tuesday!

At this time of year, it’s easy to get overwhelmed with shopping, long line-ups, socials and all the activity around days like Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

Introducing… Giving Tuesday, the new kid in town, the ‘day’ that is all about giving, making a positive change in your community, and putting a smile on the face of someone in need with a small action like volunteering or donating.

Baby Franklin was only 10 days old when a fire forced him and his mom Josie from their home. The Canadian Red Cross was able to help his family during this emergency.

For Giving Tuesday, we’ve made it easy for you to help families and communities in need by offering the opportunity to customize your gift and help people in Canada. Check out the stories of baby Franklin and others, and choose how you want to help people recover from house fires, provide care for seniors and promote health in your community.

As we celebrate Giving Tuesday, we’re putting out a challenge to all our supporters. How will you give back today? Leave a comment or tweet us @redcrosscanada and include #GivingTuesdayCA.