#53: Haiti

Published: May 22, 2013, 9:52 p.m.

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It\'s a doctor\'s worst nightmare. You arrive at the hospital--and the hospital has collapsed. In the rubble, a thousand people are near death. You have no medicine. You have no equipment. You\'ve never been in a situation like this before. And yet: you have to act.\\xa0
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Three years ago, that\'s what Dr. David Walton found when he arrived at what had once been the biggest hospital in Haiti, 48 hours after the earthquake.\\xa0
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From the US, it\'s easy to forget that the deadliest disaster of the 21st century occurred just a two-hour flight away from the United States. And it\'s easier still to think that so many people died because of a "natural disaster." But as Dr. Walton makes clear in this unforgettable, searing, and ultimately hopeful interview, the deadliness of disasters is something that we, as human beings, can do something about.\\xa0
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And here\'s some evidence for his case:\\xa0In the next few weeks, the inpatient clinic will open at a state-of-the art teaching hospital: a hospital powered entirely by solar energy, with its own eco-friendly water treatment system and a groundbreaking new system to support decentralized medical care. In the middle of rural Haiti.
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The story of\\xa0Mirebalais Hospital is a story of hope rising out of tragedy. Dr. Walton over oversaw the hospital\'s construction. And when you hear his story, you\'ll never think about poverty, health, Haiti, medicine in the same way.\\xa0
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