Posted on 03/08/2010 8:49:37 PM PST by Former Military Chick
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti The U.S. military is testing samples of soil, water and air from hundreds of sites in Haiti to determine if troops could have been exposed to hazardous substances during earthquake relief efforts.
Preventive medicine teams from the Army, Air Force and Navy have collected the samples, which include rubble from collapsed buildings and dust churned up by rubble removal, from sites where military personnel have worked over the past two months, according to Maj. Rebecca Carter, 43, an Air Force environmental engineer working in Port-au-Prince.
U.S. personnel in the Haitian capital have been working in the middle of an environmental nightmare since the Jan. 13 earthquake. Corpses still lie in the streets or buried under heaps of rubble. Rivers and streams are overflowing with trash that flows into the ocean to wash up on local beaches each morning.
Troops have also been assisting homeless Haitians in overcrowded and unsanitary camps and working in overburdened medical facilities where infectious diseases are a hazard.
Carter said shes not prepared to release a list of contaminants for which the military is testing.
I would only prefer to say that we are sampling for a wide range of chemicals of concern, she said.
Members of the 82nd Airborne Division who have been helping clear rubble from downtown Port-au-Prince for the past month have reported sore throats and coughs that they believe may be related to dust that they breathe in during missions.
Sgt. 1st Class Ernest Rodriguez, 37, of Camden, N.J., said his platoon provides security during rubble removal missions every three days. On recent missions, soldiers spent 12-hour shifts standing among the debris while bulldozers churned up clouds of thick dust.
It depends on where you are standing and which way the wind is blowing, Rodriguez said. The dust can get pretty thick in the air when they start moving all that rubble.
Navy personnel visited rubble removal sites to take air-quality samples, putting out air pumps for three hours at a time, he said.
You tend to cough a lot and you get a sore throat, he said. It could be a lot of other factors but Im pretty sure dust is a big part of it.
Some Haitians wear surgical masks to protect themselves from the dust and disease in the city. The Army provides the infantrymen with masks but the tropical heat makes wearing them uncomfortable and many soldiers only use them when the dust is at its thickest.
Its 97 degrees out here and the mask also impedes communication when you are trying to do crowd control, Rodriguez said.
Other members of the 82nd said they had worked closely with people suffering from communicable diseases during a mission at Port-au-Princes main hospital.
Sgt. 1st Class Haven Crecelius, 29, of Denison, Iowa, said he was tasked with collecting patients suffering from communicable diseases from throughout the hospital and taking them to an isolation tent.
There were a couple with open sores and people with tuberculosis. If they cough on you, you can contract it through your eyes, he said, adding that he was issued a mask with eye protection.
However, another soldier who helped gather up the patients, Pfc. Daniel Eldien, 20, of Andover, Minn., said it was only after he escorted a half-naked Haitian woman to the isolation tent that he learned she had tuberculosis. He wasnt wearing a mask at the time, he said.
When we get back, they are going to test us for stuff like tuberculosis, HIV and malaria, he said.
Several soldiers have already contracted malaria during the mission to Haiti. The disease is borne by mosquitoes and U.S. personnel in Haiti are required to take anti-malarial preventive medications. A civil affairs officer working with the 82nd, referred to only as Capt. Mike because of the normally secretive nature of his units work, spends his days visiting camps in the capital. Many are strewn with trash and have open pits full of human waste nearby.
Last week, during a visit to a slum named Bel Air, the civil affairs soldiers walked through a smoke-shrouded marketplace where fly-infested piles of raw meat were sold within a short distance of a towering pile of burning refuse. Nearby, children played beside a pond of stagnant purple water while pigs and goats feasted in an overflowing dumpster.
Their primary source of fuel is charcoal, Capt. Mike said as a cloud of black smoke drifted through the slum. And the air quality in the rubble is much worse than in the rest of the city.
Its going to take a while before the military knows exactly which contaminants personnel may have been exposed to, said Carter, who works out of a laboratory housed in a tent at the airport in Port-au-Prince.
Samples that the Air Force team has taken, from locations that include the airport, the site of an Air force Expeditionary Medical Support Hospital and the ruins of the Hotel Montana, will be sent to the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland for testing, she said.
Results wont be available until the center has finished testing the samples, Carter said.
We didnt know what was here coming in, she said. Our mission is to put together as much information as we can while we are here so we can document any potential exposure.
Our troops have done a great thing. I was thrilled to see the left like Sean Penn go on and on about the great things our troops do.
Hello I know this. But, they do things you don't like. Like their job in Iraq or in Afganistan. But when it comes to humanitarian mission's that is fine and dandy.
Furthermore, many have been interrupted from family time to spend time in Haiti. The very thing the left has been yakking about.
After reading this article I have to say I am very worried about our fine men and women.
I asked my beloved, you see a lot of awful things in war, how would you compare what you see in Haiti. He assured me what you deal with are 2 different mission's but having said that seeing dead bodies on every street corner, isn't quite the mission someone signs on when they join the military.
But, a direct order is never disobeyed.
It should be no surprise that toxic muck would get kicked up in Haiti or any third world place.
I would hope that any related illnesses contracted by troops sent to the area would be addressed by the VA system as though they were combat related.
They should not be doing the UN’s job which the UN never does any way.
Prayers for all of our troops no matter where they are serving.
I hope they will disobey orders when zero orders them to fire on American citizens for not following the new doctrine and policies he’s implementing for “our own good.”
I objected to our troops even going into Haiti for one minute to deliver one bottle of water or an aspirin. The issue in this story just adds to the soundness of that opinion.
There are private organizations and international organizations that we support financially, such as the UN, that should be handling these events. That the UN is incompetent is irrelevant. This would have been a good opportunity to demonstrate to the world how useless they are and how giving them money is no different from flushing it down a toilet. And if they can’t do the job, then I guess the world would just have to do without one more third-world, blood-sucking parasitic $#!+hole.
Agreed, the military is for breaking things and kicking @ss, not a meals-on-wheels program for the world. It was when this sort of crap started in the 90's that I got out.
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