Hopkins School of Nursing brings Hope and Healing to Haiti
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HSN's mission is to offer hope and sustainable resources to residents. According to Sloand, oftentimes students "develop a heart for Haiti", making their work ". . . heartbreaking and hard to swallow." She adds in 2010 the situation after the earthquake was dire: infrastructure was reduced to rubble in communities and peoples' health was endangered by homelessness and the cholera epidemic. She remembers her team treated hundreds of survivors, ". . . but there would still be children crying for shelter or medical care . . ." Despite the pain, it motivated everyone to persevere.
It has been nearly five years from January 12th, and signs of recovery are evident, but no overnight fix exists to solve the infrastructure problems of Haiti. One area the students are focusing on is the cholera epidemic, in which they are educating the community on a hand-washing technique called 'tippy taps'. The success of the prevention tactic proved simple solutions to complex problems can work in poverty-stricken rural communities.
Read more: Education, Registered Nurse, Education
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