Posts written by Kitty Sparhawk

It’s a go!

After ten or more days of being unsure whether we could go on this trip or not because of the unrest in Haiti, we are finally resolved to go on our original schedule. It is Haiti so things could change, but all seems well today.

We have our scheduled “packing party” this Saturday (March 2) so all the donated supplies for this trip need to be ready by then.

In addition, we are excited to announce that Dr. Jessie Pierce, through Staunton Baptist Church of Huddleston, VA, has generously donated vitamins and other supplies to Project Starfish. They will be well received in Haiti.

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Wings to Haiti

Great Thanks to our Friends at Gleaning For the World with a special shout out to Danielle, Lisa, and Phinees! Your Team is so generous with your donation of 46 “Wings” washable personal care kits for the Women of Ile a Vache, Haiti. These Kits are very precious for hygiene when paper

Contents of WINGS kit

products are scarce and there is no good solution for disposal. We are also excited to be able to distribute these to women and young ladies during clinics in March and to see the progress on the Dr. Peter Y. Whitehead Medical Clinic building!

Our new friends at Gleaning for the World – Tom with Phinees and Lisa

 

 

Angel’s Story

Angel was born into a family that included several older school age siblings, her father (who was a hardworking farmer), her mother, and her elderly grandmother. Despite being very healthy she had a strange lump at the base of her spine, and very thin, floppy legs. Angel could not learn to use her legs at all and the Doctors in Haiti told her parents she had a problem with her spinal cord, and there is no way to treat her in Haiti, but she might be able to be helped in the USA.

Family visit in the clinic at the church

With great sadness mixed with hope, her parents give their little girl to the Missionaries to bring to the US, where she was evaluated and treated with painstaking and difficult surgery to untangle the nerves in her spine. A family with several children opened their home, cared for her, and helped her through surgery and recovery. She went through physical therapy and even learned to use a rolling walker. Plans were made for her to return to her family in Haiti.

In the interim, her mother had become pregnant with twins, and she died during the delivery so Angel’s father had no choice but to send the twins to nuns in a convent orphanage to raise, and so the American family was asked to continue Angel’s care.

Think how the story would be different if Angel’s mother had had adequate nutrition, prenatal care, and vitamins , which are felt to help prevent such defects.

Scientific studies show that women with vitamin B12 deficiency in early pregnancy are up to five times more likely to have a child with neural tube defects, such as spina bifida (the name for Angel’s illness) compared to women with high levels of vitamin B12.

In addition to prevention of birth defects with prenatal care, think how much less traumatic for a baby to remain with her natural parents, or, at worst, to be able to be returned to her family of origin after her surgery to grow and thrive in Haiti and how much better it would be for the twins to have had adequate prenatal care and a safe birth.

All of these are possible with local care in the communities in Haiti. Preventive and prenatal care as well as safe deliveries are within reach with your support. Please help us by pledging a monthly donation to Project Starfish Haiti designated for the Peter Y. Whitehead Community Health Clinic.

Blessed and Peace Filled Thanksgiving

As I hear news again of unrest in Haiti, I contacted “Felix ‘ my friend and coworker over several mission trips. He noted the anxiety of living in a country where those in power seem to not be able to be trusted, and the disappointment he feels as a young man who loves his country, but is so frustrated by the steps backward due to the actions of some people. He holds hope that the situation will again improve. It seems that for every five steps forward, the people of Haiti have to endure one step back.  Read More

Thatch roof cook house

Here we go again

Here we are, the Team, from Project Starfish Haiti, preparing for a trip to reunite with our Friends and Colleagues on Ile a Vache, with plans to hold medical clinics in the community’s Church, as well as at other local Community Centers.

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