Heurese Survives Again!--January 2010
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Heurese Survives Again!
The saga of survival of a young Haitian woman continues.
Heurese is a 30-year-old Haitian woman who Haitian Hearts brought to the United States for heart surgery 10 years ago. She had heart surgery at OSF-SFMC in Peoria.
Heurese returned to Haiti and Haitian Hearts followed her there with medical exams, provided her with medication, and did echocardiograms on her heart over the years.
In 2008 Heurese became sick again. Her aortic valve became leaky and she developed a hole near her ventricular septal defect repair. This threw Heurese back into congestive heart failure.
Thinking that she was going to die, she placed her two young children with family members living in southern Haiti and Heurese remained in her shack in Carrefour with her younger brother Jean-Louis. Carrefour is a zone right outside of Port-au-Prince with 400,000 people living on top of each other.
Haitian gangs were preying on people in Carrefour and UN soldiers were also using young Haitian women as play things.
Four severe tropical storms battered Haiti during August of 2008 and Heurese ran out of food.
I begged OSF-SFMC to reaccept her for heart surgery. OSF did not respond...apparently the Sister's mission does not include young and poor Haitian women living in a dangerous slum dying of heart failure.
Then a miracle happened. Heurese was accepted by Cleveland Clinic and we moved her out of Carrefour to a safe part in Port-au-Prince for one month where she received two hot meals per day. And she was safe from the gangs and the UN.
Her passport was renewed and we applied for a visa for her to travel to Cleveland for heart surgery. The visa was granted in November 2008.
We brought her to the US once again and Heurese underwent successful heart surgery at Cleveland Clinic in December 2008. She recovered nicely.
During her stay in the United States, Peoria OSF's attorney Douglass Marshall contacted the United States Consulate in Haiti requesting information on Heurese. This confidential information was not given to him by the Consulate.
Heurese returned to Haiti in 2009 and we have kept in contact with her until Tuesday of this week, the day the earthquake destroyed Heurese's home in Carrefour.
Early this morning Heurese called a friend of ours who let us know Heurese was alive and she was heading back to her hometown of Bainet on Haiti's southern coast to be reuinted with her children and mother.
Heurese is remarkable. Heurese is a survivor. The world is seeing the courage of the Haitian people now. Haitian Hearts has seen the courage of the Haitian people for many years. Heurese is just one example.
Napoleon and his army never had a chance against the Haitian slaves in the late 1700's. He just didn't know it.
Four severe tropical storms battered Haiti during August of 2008 and Heurese ran out of food.
I begged OSF-SFMC to reaccept her for heart surgery. OSF did not respond...apparently the Sister's mission does not include young and poor Haitian women living in a dangerous slum dying of heart failure.
Then a miracle happened. Heurese was accepted by Cleveland Clinic and we moved her out of Carrefour to a safe part in Port-au-Prince for one month where she received two hot meals per day. And she was safe from the gangs and the UN.
Her passport was renewed and we applied for a visa for her to travel to Cleveland for heart surgery. The visa was granted in November 2008.
We brought her to the US once again and Heurese underwent successful heart surgery at Cleveland Clinic in December 2008. She recovered nicely.
During her stay in the United States, Peoria OSF's attorney Douglass Marshall contacted the United States Consulate in Haiti requesting information on Heurese. This confidential information was not given to him by the Consulate.
Heurese returned to Haiti in 2009 and we have kept in contact with her until Tuesday of this week, the day the earthquake destroyed Heurese's home in Carrefour.
Early this morning Heurese called a friend of ours who let us know Heurese was alive and she was heading back to her hometown of Bainet on Haiti's southern coast to be reuinted with her children and mother.
Heurese is remarkable. Heurese is a survivor. The world is seeing the courage of the Haitian people now. Haitian Hearts has seen the courage of the Haitian people for many years. Heurese is just one example.
Napoleon and his army never had a chance against the Haitian slaves in the late 1700's. He just didn't know it.
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