Project HOPE UK ©2010 All Rights Reserved.  Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
A UK Registered Charity, working in partnership with Project HOPE (People-to-People Health Foundation Inc)

Registered Charity Number 1039457

Click the logo to visit the
main Project HOPE UK
Web site
Contact
     active partnership with you
to bring HOPE to a shattered world
NEWS RELEASE
• 25.02.2010
Click here to make a donation to the Project HOPE UK Haiti Fund
NOW

A Paediatrician and Mother, Dr. Wu Gives Her All to Help the Children of Haiti

 

Project HOPE volunteer Dr. Betty Wu has tears in her eyes while talking about one of her patients she couldn't save. "It was a six-year-old girl, severely injured during the earthquake. She came too late to us," she says. The girl was admitted to the USNS Comfort only a few days ago and died Wednesday night. "We tried everything, everything."

 

Dr. Wu has volunteered before, many times, including in Haiti. The paediatric emergency physician has seen much in her volunteer career--the catastrophic 2004 Tsunami and the 2010 Haitian earthquake are just two of the natural disasters where Dr. Wu has volunteered her medical expertise to help. Still, there is much sadness in her voice when she speaks about this one young patient.


"What was especially tragic about this case is that the parents were not brought on board," she says. "Usually at least one parent accompanies the child to the Comfort, but the transferring hospital only brought the child. The Navy staff made sure to bring the dad on board the next day. I met him to tell him personally that his daughter was cared for."
 

Dr. Wu explains how important it is to have the parents nearby when a medical team tries to save their child's life studies have shown, she says, that it is very beneficial for parents if they can watch how hard doctors and nurses work for the survival of a patient.


Dr. Wu takes care of incoming patients, especially the children, in the causalities and receiving unit of the USNS Comfort. Once the patients are admitted she follows up with them in the paediatric ward to make sure their treatment goes well.

After her 12-hour shifts she often spends a few moments online to send emails to her husband, a pilot for the Minnesota National Guard, or to watch a little video sent from home showing her two-year-old daughter.
"It was a little bit more difficult this time to sign up to volunteer because I had to leave her," she says.

 

Continue to help Project HOPE UK provide long term care for the people in Haiti.