Blog Contributor:

Senator Bill Frist M.D.

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Sen. Frist: Famine victims need more public and private donations


Aug 9th, 2011 4:38 PM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Senator Bill Frist, ONE supporter, former majority leader of the US Senate and chair of Hope Through Healing Hands, is on a trip to Kenya with Dr. Jill Biden and USAID Administrator Raj Shah to learn more about famine and the crisis in the Horn of Africa.

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Sen. Frist and Administrator Shah. Sen. Frist holds a box of food rations, a high protein food that is given to new arrivals to reverse the course of their starvation.

Yesterday, I visited the Dadaab Refugee Complex in eastern Kenya with Second Lady Dr. Jill Biden and USAID Administrator Raj Shah. While there, we heard stories from mothers with their children who had lost their husbands. Families who had journeyed for weeks to arrive at the camp malnourished and in dire need of medical assistance. And, worst of all, parents who had heartbreaking stories of losing children in the flight from famine in Somalia.

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Sen. Frist heads to Kenya to study famine’s effects


Aug 8th, 2011 11:07 AM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Senator Bill Frist is on a trip to Kenya with Dr. Jill Biden and USAID Administrator Raj Shah to learn more about famine and the crisis in the Horn of Africa.

WHF and Biden_camp

More than 29,000 young children have died of malnutrition and disease in Somalia in the past 90 days. We are now on our way to the Horn of Africa to see what more we as a nation can do.

Early this morning, our plane left Washington, D.C., bound for East Africa. I’m flying with Second Lady Dr. Jill Biden and USAID Administrator Raj Shah to study the famine’s effects on the lives of more than 12 million people, many of them children.

In fact, it is now being called “the children’s famine.”

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“The building crumbled around her”


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Jan 20th, 2010 9:49 PM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Senator Bill Frist has been regularly corresponding with us about what he’s seeing on the ground in Haiti. He’s also blogging about his experiences at BillFrist.com and HopeThroughHealingHands.org. You can read his previous posts in our Haiti series here.

I just finished rounds. Here is the story of one young woman, Rouite Tisma:

She is a 16 year old schoolgirl still at school at 4:30.

The earthquake hit and the building crumbled around her, killing 6 others.

Dad, knowing she had stayed at school, went that night with flashlight and search for his daughter. He told me he found nothing but piles of boulders and concrete where the school had been. Going from mound to mound, he called out her name … Nothing but collapsed building. He helplessly called for hours wandering from pile to pile of building rubble. Miraculously, she recognized his voice, and she responded from beneath 6 feet of rubble and concrete. She called backed, hearing her Dad calling her name. It was pitch dark, but he directed his flashlight in the direction of his daughter’s voice. He spotted the back of her neck through the deep pile. He told her that she would be alright. He ran back to get his son to help remove her from the crushed debris.

Using just a shovel and pick, they worked to get her out. While buried, they could not get food or water to her because she was crumpled over and face down. On the third day, she was freed. Three days of father and son digging.

She was brought to hospital and waited for 24 hours. Her right leg was swollen and crushed. Fascitomy. Left forearm swollen — fasciotomy. No sensation in leg or hand and grossly swollen. But she is alive … And thankful.

On rounds yesterday her appreciative Dad opened his Bible to John 3:16 and pointed it out to us. It was in Creole so we, of course, couldn’t read it.

Today she looks great and her brother was eager to help massaging her hands for physical therapy.

This gives some feel to what we are doing and seeing in Haiti.

Update from Bill Frist in Haiti


update-from-bill-frist-in-haiti

Jan 20th, 2010 4:55 PM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Senator Bill Frist has been regularly corresponding with us about what he’s seeing on the ground in Haiti. He’s also blogging about his experiences at BillFrist.com and HopeThroughHealingHands.org. You can read his previous posts here, here, and here.

Frist with woman at BMH

We got to bed late last night after ward surgery – sleeping 14 people in a house on the hospital grounds. Early this morning, we were awakened to violent shaking. It seemed to last a minute, but probably only 15 seconds or so. It felt like someone was shaking me to wake up. Within seconds, hundreds of people throughout the hospital were wailing. The memories of the loss of children and crushing buildings are still so raw for those suffering already, this aftershock was a grim reminder of the pain and suffering they’ve been through over the past week. With a single aftershock, things settled down after an hour. No one is hurt here, but it is still psychologically damaging, and those wounds will take much longer to heal.

Frist w young boy at BMH

We met in house on compound as a medical team; there are 15 of us. Nurses presented plans for assigning responsibility. One nurse is overseeing wounds, another all meds. The departing Ecuadorian rapid response surgical and medical team briefed everyone else on what they would see as next phase. Then we discussed among ourselves the best combination of antibiotics, dependent in part on what supplies we have. We have enough supplies for 2 to 3 days, but more is on the way so no reason to overconserve.

Bill Frist checks in from Double Harvest Hospital in Haiti


bill-frist-checks-in-from-double-harvest-hospital-in-haiti

Jan 19th, 2010 1:52 PM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Senator Bill Frist has been regularly corresponding with us about what he’s seeing on the ground in Haiti. He’s also blogging about his experiences at BillFrist.com and HopeThroughHealingHands.org. Below is his third update from Haiti. You can read his previous posts here and here.

Last night, we visited Double Harvest Hospital about an hour away from Baptist Mission Hospital. It is a tremendous facility that is in early stages of establishing a relationship with Harvard’s Partners program. We decided to send one of our surgeons there (Dr. Warren Cooper, who all of my boys have operated or been with in Sudan over the years). Warren can do it all.

Then back to the hospital compound where we were treated to a fantastic home-cooked meal (I asked, “What’s the sauce for the rice?” The cook said “I don’t know but you will like.”). Great conversation as everyone gathered in their scrubs, exhausted, to recount their experiences of the day. The nurses have got things really organized.

We were sleeping in sleeping bags by 10pm. Slept well in room with 8 others. We can’t drink water, and there is no hot water. Very comfortable though, seriously.

Up at 5 am to take 45 min. rough journey to town. Palace in shambles as you see on television back at home. Thousands and thousands of people displaced to field and the square in front of palace. Obviously no water and no latrines. The sights and smells in the early morning hours you don’t feel from tv … Stench, some crying, people searching for water, fires burning.

We are now running to the airport early am for supplies. Only thing short supply now is cast materials and pins to externally fix broken bones. Ran into a medic (James L. Clark) who is former special forces and who did medical work with me just after Katrina when we were both seeing some of the 3000 patients who flooded New Orleans airport just after levees broke. Small world and big hearts.

As I’m on the tarmac looking through palettes of supplies, I think how much regular old people at home have helped in response to my personal requests … The medicines and IV fluids I brought in are now in people saving their lives. I think of the people at Centennial Medical Center (Tom Herron and Micki Slingerland who met me early Sunday just a few hours after my call) and the people at the local Walgreens on Harding and Jennifer Dilliard (district manager) who today are sending in some much needed antibiotics. And all the people who have contributed to our foundation Hope Through Healing Hands (I am immediately channeling the money to where I know it can be used on the ground right now, making the most difference.) Thanks to all.

Bill Frist Reports from Haiti


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Jan 19th, 2010 9:49 AM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Former Senator Majority Leader, and Former Co-Chair of ONE Vote ‘08, Dr. Bill Frist is currently in Haiti helping with the country’s grave need for more surgeons in the wake of last’s week’s devastating earthquake. He’s blogging about his experiences at BillFrist.com and HopeThroughHealingHands.org. You can read his first post here. Below is his second update from Haiti:

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Its 3:30pm and we have been on site for 5 hours. The Baptist Mission Hospital here in Fermathe has two doctors and about 100 beds. Since the hospital is 20 miles north of Port au Prince, it is normally used as a referral hospital. But it is all pretty simple; it did not have even a basic lab until last month; it does not have blood for transfusions; and it is very elementary.

For example, we have one patient being transfused. She had a gastrointestinal bleed last night and her hemoglobin is only two. There is no blood, so she is being transfused directly from the vein of a doctor of the same blood type.

All serious injuries are coming here. The hospital consists of a single functional operating room, two large ward rooms, and a single long hall connecting them all. It has been overwhelmed.

It has been packed all day. You can barely move through the hallway. We quickly toured the facility, made an initial assessment, and then we met with the exhausted limited medical staff.

Supplies - Haiti

Findings: Shortage of nurses, no triage going on, no medical records, no place to house postoperative patients. We have an anesthesiologist with us, but we lack basic anesthesia equipment.

Patients: All ages, mainly fractures, the wounds that are now 6 days old are all infected. There is a shortage of pins and plates to stabilize the wounds.

I’m in a meeting now with 6 Samaritan’s Purse members and hospital leadership addressing the issues above.

More later. We need to unload the antibiotics.

Bill Frist on the Ground in Haiti


bill-frist-on-the-ground-in-haiti

Jan 18th, 2010 12:00 PM UTC
By Senator Bill Frist M.D.

Former Senator Majority Leader, and Former Co-Chair of ONE Vote ’08, Dr. Bill Frist is currently in Haiti helping with the country’s grave need for more surgeons in the wake of last’s week’s devastating earthquake. He’s blogging about his experiences at BillFrist.com and HopeThroughHealingHands.org. They’ve let us cross post his first entry from Haiti below.

Traveling to Haiti today on Medical Mission

Frist and Centennial

The medical need in Haiti is desperate — in particular for surgeons. Having responded in this capacity just after the tsunami in Sri Lanka and four days after the levees broke following Katrina, I decided to join fellow physicians from Samaritans purse in Haiti.

On Sunday I spent the morning at Centennial Medical Center in Nashville going through their basement, picking out medical supplies most notably antibiotics and intravenous fluids, they generously provided for the victims of the earthquake in Haiti.

Last night I loaded up the boxes with Karyn, and then with the help of the agents at Delta, got the ten heavy boxes of supplies down to southern Florida. Our medical team of ten departed for Haiti at 6am this morning.

Haiti is different than the last 2 disasters I responded to. In the tsunami and Katrina, most died quickly of drowning. In Haiti most of the injuries are due to the crush of the collapse of structures, with broken bones common. Infection and shock (low blood volume) set in quickly, thus the need for fluids and antibiotics.

Centennial has offered a great supply, but we need more. Hopefully in the next couple of days we can get a plane load into the hospital there to meet this critical need.

As I can, I will be blogging daily to report what is happening on the ground. I invite you to visit www.billfrist.com and www.hopethroughhealinghands.org to learn more about the disaster of Haiti over the course of the next week.

-Dr. Bill Frist

Karyn and boxes

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