Benefit Committee and Friends

NYDG Foundation would like to thank the benefit committee for their hard work in planning the upcoming benefit:

EJ Camp

Alison Curry

Christian Galan

Ranjana Khan

Helena Matinez

Terry Reed

Dr. Peggy R. Robinson, LA.c

Jennifer Ruff

A very special thanks to the following individuals for their amazing generosity:

Margery Mayer

Theodore Mayer

L’Wren Scott

Robert Nickqs

Chestnuts  in the Tuileries

Benefit for Haiti: More Prosthetics on the Way

Here is the link to the Huffington Post article: Benefit for Haiti: More Prosthetics on the Way

Benefit for Haiti: More Prosthetics on the Way

By Alicia WhitakerHuman

Posted: May 5, 2010 2:33 PM

Shortly after the earthquake in Haiti, teams of doctors volunteering to help made their way to Haiti with supplies and equipment for field hospitals. The horrific result of this particular earthquake and its impact on a country of fragile buildings led to an unprecedented number of amputations – the current estimate is upwards of 5,000 people. In other major earthquakes, lost limbs have numbered in the hundreds, not the thousands.

One of those doctors was Dr. David Colbert, a NYC-based dermatologist and internist who also has experience as an emergency room physician with advanced wound care expertise. Trained in France, he speaks fluent French and has learned enough words in Creole to make an enormous difference to the frightened patients he encountered early in the crisis, who were coping with crushing injuries and serious infections in broken limbs that made amputation the only option. Some had waited for treatment for several days and their limbs now could not be saved.

Colbert assisted in several emergency amputations, including one for a young man named Wilfred who insisted he’d rather lose his life than his leg. It was Colbert’s job to convince him otherwise, and he promised the skeptical Wilfrid he’d find him a state-of-the-art prosthetic. The boy was wheeled into surgery.

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Colbert came back to NY determined to raise awareness and money for prosthetics and the related services that make them work in a country where low-tech is the approach of choice because of issues with money, infrastructure and skills. He reached out to the Ivan Sabel Hanger Foundation, allied with Hanger Orthotics and Prosthetics, the world’s largest maker of prosthetics , and decided to partner with them to make it happen.

Terry Reed, an NYC-based author and screen writer and a recent collaborator with Dr. Colbert on a diet and nutrition book, The High School Reunion Diet, recently traveled to Haiti and headed to the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Deschapelles, now the site of a prosthetics clinic. Here’s her report on what she found:

“During the earthquake, hundreds had been transported here over rough roads from Port-au-Prince and lay waiting in the courtyard for medical attention. When the Hanger people offered materials and expertise for the devastating number of amputees, the hospital gave Hanger a building for a clinic. In the front of the clinic, the technicians fit limbs for the people who arrive on crutches, in wheelbarrows, on the backs of mopeds. There’s a wing where the therapists teach the newly fitted to walk. They make the prosthetics in the back of the clinic, in a factory. The knee joints, elbows and other mechanical parts are flown in, but much of the artistry happens on site, where a custom leg is created by hands that understand the mysteries of weight bearing and tibia bones and patellas. The day I was there, a small team of hard-working designers and technicians made sixty three legs.”

Back in New York, designer L’Wren Scott, a friend of Dr. Colbert’s, enlisted the help of her boyfriend Mick Jagger to spearhead a benefit that will take place on Thursday, May 6. Together with Dr. Colbert, Reed, David Scott and other members of the doctor’s newly-formed foundation, they have attracted a large group of celebrities who are lending their names, donating goods for an auction and giving money for the cause. Among them are Rachel Weisz, Catherine Zeta Jones, Michelle Williams, Sienna Miller, Jude Law, Helmut Lang, John Currin, Rachel Feinstein, Naomi Watts, Zac Posen, Christopher Niquet, Edie Falco, and Margery and Ted Mayer.

Auction items include art and photography, couture gowns and jewelry, guitars signed by Jagger and the Rolling Stones and a number of other special donations from artists, designers and musicians.

The benefit and auction will be held Thursday, May 6th, 2010 at The Greenhouse, Scholastic, 557 Broadway, New York. The event includes a VIP Reception from 6 to 7:00 PM and a Cocktail Party and Auction from 7-10PM Tickets, list of auction items and more information are available at www.nydgfoundation.org/haiti

Our Trip to Haiti, March 22

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Dr. David Colbert, NYDG Foundation

Dr. Dianne Jean-Francois, Catholic Medical Missions, Port-au-Prince, Haiti

Benefit Invite

Click image to enlarge

NYDG Foundation Haiti Benefit- Mick Jagger, Dylan, Bono, Springsteen, Guitars 4:30PT May 6

Haiti benefit mentioned on Martha Stewart Show

Dr. Colbert appeared March 3rd on the Martha Stewart show.  Among other topics, Dr. Colbert talked about NYDG’s new non-profit and its mission to raise funds to purchase prosthetic limbs for the many Haitian amputees.

Check out the video clip here

NYC Dermatologist Mobilizes the A List to Help Haitian Amputees

Here is the link to the Huffington Post article: NYC Dermatologist Mobilizes the A List to Help Haitian Amputees

NYC Dermatologist Mobilizes the A List to Help Haitian Amputees

By Alicia WhitakerHuman

Posted: February 25, 2010 12:18 PM

Now that the Olympics are winding down, with endless images of healthy young people doing amazing and often dangerous feats of athleticism, media coverage is returning to the ongoing dilemmas in Haiti. A recent New York Times article focused on the extraordinary number of amputations performed as a result of the earthquake.

Of course record keeping in a country where an already fragile infrastructure has been destroyed is difficult, but the Times reported that 6,000 to 8,000 people have lost limbs or digits and that 2,000 to 4,000 amputations have been performed. In past quakes of similar magnitude, amputations have numbered in the hundreds, not the thousands. They are the defining injury of this earthquake.

We’ve learned that many of these amputations were performed in very primitive conditions, in makeshift hospitals, often after days of delay that caused ruinous infections. Amputations have saved lives but have created enormous challenges for people who may have lost their jobs, homes, families and support for rehabilitation and follow up care. And the harsh reality of life in Haiti with this type of disability is that people are often treated as outcasts and are unemployable.

NYC dermatologist and internist Dr. David Colbert from the New York Dermatology Group was one of the physicians who responded to the emergency by volunteering to provide medical care. Dr. Colbert and his Medical Assistant Paul Hogue spent a week in Haiti in the beginning of February and experienced the avalanche of amputations and related follow up care. See excerpts from his New York Post video diary here.

Colbert is a dermatologist in New York City whose practice includes A-list models and actors and where the order of the day is keeping the already beautiful wrinkle-free and youthful. What many don’t know is that he speaks fluent French, has a specialty in wound care, has worked as an emergency room physician and is a dermatological surgeon. He has also served on medical missions to Cambodia and other parts of the world experiencing environmental or political disasters. A Haitian physician, Dr. Peggy Regis, is a member of his team in New York.

As a result of his experience in Haiti, Colbert’s team has established a not-for-profit foundation to raise money for prosthetics and related medical supplies and services. The NYDG Foundation is partnering with ARIMED Orthotics and Prosthetics to provide prosthesis for Haitians with limb-loss. They will hold a fundraiser on Thursday, May 6 at Scholastic, Inc, at 557 Broadway in Soho.

I came back from Haiti believing that one of the most important things we can do to help now is to find a way to make available the prosthetics and related services that people will need to function again. If each of us does one little thing, it can add up to a very big thing, so I believe that we can raise money for a prosthetics clinic in Port au Prince–that will make a difference.

Many celebrities and prominent New Yorkers have offered to participate, and an auction will feature works from artists Jack Pierson, Jill Moser, Shawn Dulaney, Kelly Walker, and EJ Camp, and clothes from well-known fashion designers.

Joining Colbert as hosts for the fund raiser are Naomi Watts, Rachel Weisz, Michelle Williams, Helmut Lang, and L’Wren Scott.

Prosthetics are costly — the average cost in the US is around $6,000, but can easily reach $25,000 — few are available in Haiti and there are enormous issues related to custom-fitting them, repairing them and replacing them when they break or when people grow out of them. In addition, people need physical therapy to learn how to use them.

As Haiti continues to dig out of the tragedy and as the world organizes its longer term response, it’s clear that there needs to be new thinking about social change in Haiti as well as the health resources to support such a large group of mostly very young amputees. Initiatives such as Colbert’s provide hope that there will be resources to meet the need.

Benefit for Haitian amputees

Please see the below letter for more information on the benefit and auction we are having May 6th in New York City.

Click to enlarge

iPod Touches for Haiti

NYDG Haiti Relief has been working with two wonderful organizations who have also been working in the field in Haiti.

The Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

Operational Medicine Institute

These organizations have been using iPod touches and the app  iCharts to collect patient data in the field.  However, the lack of devices has limited the capability to collect information on remote and additional sites.  NYDG was happy to donate several iPod touches for the effort.

Haiti recap in NY Post

Read Dr. Colbert’s recap of his medical mission to Haiti in today’s New York Post

Here is the link: What was lost in Haiti

New York Post

What was lost in Haiti

By DAVID COLBERT, MD

Last Updated: 5:14 AM, February 7, 2010

Posted: 12:48 AM, February 7, 2010

Forgotten sometimes in the heartbreaking death count from the Haiti earthquake — more than 200,000 at last estimate — is the toll on the survivors. Loss of relatives, children, businesses, homes, sanity, all of these, but also, in a shocking number of cases, the loss of a limb. The quake will leave its mark for a generation, you’ll see it in the absence of arms and legs.

In only my first few days volunteering in Haiti last week, I witnessed 40 amputations, performed without the benefit of standard operating room conditions. International aid groups say the final tally could number in the thousands.

I arrived in Santo Domingo on late Friday, Jan. 29, with my medical assistant Paul Hogue, lugging monstrous black duffel bags packed with medical and surgical supplies. At 4 a.m., we boarded a bus for the border crammed with some 20 surgeons, several operating room nurses, anesthesiologists, intensive care unit specialists, counselors and medic-volunteers. Many of us had gotten the invite from the Dominican Republic-based Esperanza Foundation. Mass e-mails went out across the world, bringing wave after wave of medical personnel, who, despite the numbers, would still be hard put to handle the task at hand: a city of 4 million people, many of them survivors desperately in need of immediate medical attention. The five-hour ride is somber. What we’re feeling mostly is fear.

VIDEO: TOUR OF MAKESHIFT HAITI HOSPITAL

The hospital is a makeshift MASH-style unit without the bravado. We drive in through heavy iron gates and see a big white plantation house surrounded by Haitian mountains, the sky and the landscape transformed by Red Cross trucks and US military helicopters. There are patients on stretchers being pulled off of jerry-rigged truck-ambulances, which appear to arrive every five minutes. Many of the wounded have been literally dug out from the rubble with bare hands. Some survived up to a week without food and water. It hardly seems possible.

Inside, the first floor had been set up as so many operating rooms. Cafeteria tables serve as surgical ones. Just about any direction you look, there’s blood. The noise level is notable: children sobbing and doctors and nurses shouting. This is a kind of systematized pandemonium — a field hospital in every sense.

The surgeon looks up. “Hey, doc. Please explain to this patient we are NOT going to amputate her foot any further. We are simply planning to clean the wound.” The 23-year-old woman looks at me, expectant and terrified. I try my Parisian French, dressed up for some reason with an authoritative Southern American accent. Voila, I am apparently speaking Creole. She smiles beautifully when she hears what I have to say.

Colbert changes the dressing of Chantal, who lost her arm in the Haiti quake.

Colbert changes the dressing of Chantal, who lost her arm in the Haiti quake.

In the next room are three little girls, all under 10. Each has a broken leg, none are casted. Young orthopedic surgeon Dr. Meredith Warner of New Orleans explains that the large metal posts on the table are used instead of casting because they are both stable and carry minimal risk of infection. It’s not pretty. The metal protrudes out from the bone and through the skin, with the overall effect of an erector set. Paul and I exchange glances, wondering who will remove the metal rods in six weeks. When I ask Meredith, she shakes her head ruefully. Another orthopedist answers, “One step at a time.”

The facts are not lost on any of us: When the dire urgency of life or death is over, the survivors will be in chronic need of follow-up medical care. Nobody here yet knows where that’s coming from.

In the next room is Wilfrid. He is 19 years old. He cries that he will lose his leg. He knows this, but still hopes to hear otherwise. He tells me he was trapped for days under piles of bricks. The morphine gives him temporary emotional relief from the enormity of what is about to happen, and he is wheeled into operating room No. 4, a former pantry. Wilfrid attempts to make the sign of the cross, but the drugs kick in before he’s finished. Later I’m told that he had been on a gurney in a Port au Prince emergency room for four days, but there were so many cases even more acute, he didn’t get care. The leg could have been saved.

Young, healthy, and naturally sunny, Wilfred does well post-operatively. When I go to see him the next day to change his dressings, he’s in unaccountably good spirits. He tells me, “J’etais libere,” that he feels he has been “set free” by the surgery. The worst is apparently over: the pain and the fear. But several times, he asks me where he will get a new leg. His concern is about going back to work at his factory, and he can’t work with just one leg. “Je dois travailler” he keeps repeating. Perhaps unwisely, I say, “The Americans can get you a new leg. It may take time. But we’ll get you a leg.”

I’m not sure I believe “we” will. As he repeats his mantra, I begin to think the thing through: Who can I contact to ask about prosthesis? Who will measure it, make it, ship it, attach it? How will all this actually happen?

I write down Wilfrid’s name and his cell phone number. Perhaps it’s a small irony of modern life, but the leg had been crushed by the earthquake, but not his Nokia. I add his name on my BlackBerry contact list. He has no address anymore. I’ve heard it so many times, that each of us can make a difference. If we all do one small thing, we can tackle something big — even as big as this. As Wilfrid and I say goodbye, I figure mine will be to get him his leg.

Photos from Haiti

Dr. Colbert sent a few photos from Haiti:

Update 02/01

NYDG made the first donation of medical supplies, sending close to $2,000 to Haiti with Dr. Colbert and Medical Assistant Paul Hogue. As you can see from the pictures below, their suitcases were quite full. Over the next few weeks, NYDG will be using the remainder of the donations to buy large amounts of medical supplies. These supplies will be shipped to Esperanza International, the organization we have partnered with, in the DR and then driven to Haiti. NYDG will also be sending another medical team down in the coming weeks.

Check back soon for an update on Dr. Colbert and Paul who are currently helping in Haiti.