wautd wrote:Broomstick wrote:Yeah - except that an actual doctor with security personnel was staying! It's a case where the medical supplies would not be simply left unguarded, there would be people there to keep them from being looted.
Well I guess we'll have to take humble mr. Gupta's word for it that none of the supplies was left behind. Given the one-sideness of the article I have more the feeling that he's being a douche by writing a sensationalist article with him as the messiah but maybe that's just me.
I think there's some confusion between his
employer (CNN) exploiting the situation and Dr. Gupta's position. As a doctor, he's going to be upset that these patients aren't being cared for. Granted, thousands of people are dying in Port-au-Prince all around the city, that doesn't make it any better to watch someone die in front of you that you feel you could save if only you had the right supplies and materials. That hardly makes him a "douche" or "sensationalist". As it is, he also enlisted the crew with him to help out with the wounded, which he mentioned as well in his blog, which is hardly the action of some lone self-aggrandizing "hero". He also skipped out on hosting his usual Sunday morning show, which this week was supposed to be from Haiti, as he was putting the needs of severely injured people above his agenda and his employer's agenda. Again, not exactly "douchebag" behavior. Of course, he does have to say why he's not fulfilling his prior commitment to host that show - "Sorry, I spent the night guarding and taking care of 25 people who's prior doctors left due to lack of security" is... grandstanding? Taking advantage? What?
I'm sure it would have been MUCH easier for Dr. Gupta to bug out with the Belgian crew, get a good night's sleep, and do his usual 1 hour Sunday morning gig instead of staying up all night taking care of patient's in an admittedly risky environment at some personal risk to himself and getting no more than a short 30 sec video article and tweet or two. Oh yeah, great trade-off.
Is it too much to stomach that MAYBE a reporter and an American did the right thing by staying behind to take care of 25 hurt people?
Broomstick wrote:Those showing up to render aid have ALSO been told, repeatedly, that they must bring EVERYTHING they need. Everything. Why do reporters bring their own security? Because they know they can't depend on the UN to babysit them. Likewise, these Belgians should have brought or hired security. Seriously, for just food and water, never mind money, I'm sure they could have hired a couple dozen native Haitian men to stand in a big circle and growl at anyone intent on causing trouble.
Perhaps it was naive to assume the UN would provide security, but that's not the fault of the doctors on site.
I'm sorry, that doesn't cut it. That sort of disaster scene is no place for the naive. It's been very explicit that you bring/make arrangements for EVERYTHING. I'm sorry some people don't understand what "everything" means.
Is it an unpardonable sin? No - but it's an illustration of why this sort of rescue is not for amateurs. I don't mean amateur doctors, I mean people who aren't emergency medical personnel, trained first responders, or other people trained to cope with this sort of adverse conditions.
If it was that unsafe for the able bodied doctors, how much more unsafe was it for for the injured and ill lying helpless in those tents? Or is it OK to entirely abandon them merely because they're poor and Haitian?
It's fucking cruel to show up, doctor for an afternoon, then abandon injured people with the excuse it's too dangerous for you to stay but, oh, you with the broken limbs who just went through surgery, just lie there all fucking night, in the dark, completely on your own. If you can't handle some personal danger don't go into a disaster zone like that!
Is there an unwritten law that civilian volenteers
have to risk their own life?
If you can't stomach personal risk why the FUCK are you in Haiti, post-earthquake, where the government is non-functional and the police are nowhere to be found and desperate people are, in some cases resorting to violence for water and food? It is an
inherently unsafe place right now, both from the people and the aftershocks shaking the rubble. It's not safe. That doesn't mean you should take stupid risks, but please, anyone who thinks they can go to Port-au-Prince right now without some personal risk is a fucking idiot.
At least offering some help is better than giving no help at all. For all we know, if those medics weren't there to begin with, those same Haitans might have been dead by now. Or do you think they'd rather spent their time lying under rubble if they'd knew they'b be abandoned after receiving first aid?
Irrelevant. It was wrong to abandon those patients. Now, if someone was shooting directly at the docs, if there was an imminent threat to life and limb, I could see running away but that's
not what was happening.
These volenteers already sacrificing a lot, yet you expect them to risk their own lifes on top of that? To what gain? Some sensless but heroic death? Thanks, but I'd rather see them help the next day as well.
Other doctors and nurses in Port-au-Prince have been laboring to save people from just after the quake itself with
no security. Apparently, it's NOT instant death to be in Port-au-Prince without a gun on your hip and a bodyguard.
And do you think doctors
don't risk their lives helping patients? They are immune somehow to disease or violent patients?
If you aren't willing to stick by your patients - barring imminent threats - get the fuck out.
Abandoning those people was wrong. Now, at the time the decision was made it might have seemed to be a good idea. None of us here were on the ground, but in retrospect it was wrong and heartless. The medical personnel pulled out but made no effort to also pull out the patients? WTF?
Because maybe it was simply was impossible to move wounded people around in a reasonable amount of time?
Did anyone even ask?
Holy fuck - leave the damn medical equipment and take the patients instead! Or are you going to argue that the medical supplies were more important that actual human lives? Yes, there is risk in moving the severely injured, but if the docs think they need to flee for there lives there is equally risk in leaving them behind! Why the
fuck did they think the patients would be any safer than the docs and the medical supplies? Or are wounded Haitians regarded as expendable?