Inspiring NYTimes article: Weighing the Lives of Babies in Haiti

Posted by christina Mon, 18 Oct 2010 18:47:00 GMT

For Embrace, reading stories like this in the media saddens us, but provides us with more fuel for the fire.  We are working tirelessly so that, hopefully, 5 years from now, we won’t have to read about these stories any longer.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/28/health/28cases.html?_r=1 

A snip-it from the article:

So it was on that rainy Sunday evening that there were six women in active labor in the emergency room. And soon one of them, in her late teens, gave birth to a tiny boy, just 2 pounds 3 ounces. A neonatologist on our team estimated that he was two months premature. (The mother claimed she hadn’t even known she was pregnant.) Once the baby was born, we dried and swaddled him and started looking for a place where he could be cared for until he was stable enough to be sent home. There were no working incubators at the hospital, nor any free beds in the pediatric tents, and we had no luck finding incubators at other hospitals.

Then an American physician at another medical camp told us that he had faced a similar situation some days before, and had built his own incubator — “MacGyver” style, as he put it. He suggested we do the same. So that’s what we did. We took a cardboard box from the medical supply room, padded it with some surgical drapes and a blanket and found a desk lamp with a working bulb to serve as a source of heat. Voilà! Our youngest patient now had an incubator.

The next morning we tried to persuade the attending Haitian pediatrician to accept the baby to the pediatric tents. “Don’t be absurd!” she scoffed, as I recall. “A baby that small will not make it. He has no chance of survival, and we have no spare beds to waste.”  

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Letters from around the world: Haiti Aide?

Posted by christina Mon, 01 Feb 2010 21:06:00 GMT

Prayers to those in Haiti. We hope to help with disaster efforts, if anyone has contacts to birthing centers that are in need of infant warmers, please contact comments@embraceglobal.org

Dear Embrace, I am a Haitian Native living in Florida. I found your information on the internet and was very impressed with your work. I would like to communicate with you regarding the possibility of extending your reach to the Haitian children who are victims of the January 12th earthquake. As a mother, I am deeply impacted by the increasing rate of infant mortality. Just the other day, three babies died within one hour under the same tent serving as a makeshift hospital. While the resources were already scarce in Haiti, the situation has become more dire. I am very impressed with your product and the intuitive technology it uses. I am part of the Haiti Relief Task Force in Broward County Florida and spoke to them about Embrace. They are very excited about the impact it can have on survival for these children. Thank you in advance. Sincerely, Régine

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Milestones & Reacting to Haiti

Posted by eu-wen Mon, 08 Mar 2010 09:14:00 GMT

Huge milestones for Embrace this week!

Back in the States we have had a poster presentation in Stanford giving us the opportunity to have our data peer reviewed AND (drum roll!)  we have put our first 2 babies in our product to be warmed!

Our first baby girl was born on the 4th of March at 9:45am, and our second baby, also a girl, was born the next morning. The pictures below are proudly hung on our office walls. Depending on the frequency of births, we hope to have put ten babies in our product by the end of this month, and eventually an additional 50 babies for the purpose of this feedback study.

  

 

Our pride and joy in this progress stands in stark contrast to the frustrations we feel at our current inability to assist in instances of widespread and urgent need. The earthquake in Haiti still has severe effects till today, and it kills us to read stories such as these from doctors on the ground in Haiti where we KNOW that if we had a ready and tested product, we would be of tremendous value to needy families and save lives. But the fact of the matter is that while we have a technology that the Embrace team has personal confidence in, the product remains clinically untested. Doctors we have contacted in Haiti concur with us that despite the obvious need, now is not the time in Haiti to be experimenting with an untested infant warmer, no matter its potential.

If we went ahead anyway and put our product on the ground in Haiti would we be helping and serving babies in need? Yes we believe so. But for a delicate case like Haiti we will only move if we can do so in a way that is thoroughly responsible and in a way that we can guarantee the safety of babies put in our product.

As an organization we have a deeper duty  to the bigger picture. Four million newborns die every year, one million in India alone, mostly from preventable or treatable causes. This is the problem that we are seeking to address, and we hope that the logic of this rationale allows us to make the choices and decisions that are right by those who need us the most, regardless the sick feeling we have when the pictures and e-mail from Haiti come streaming in.  

 

 

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