The AmeriCares India team, mobilizing and leading a group of volunteer doctors over the course of two weeks, treated nearly 3,000 patients from villages in the flood-ravaged Kendrapara district of Orissa.
Less
than 48 hours after monsoon rains gave rise to crisis level flooding on
September 9, the AmeriCares India team was the first mobile medical unit
to arrive, conducting free medical camps that helped thousands of patients in
hard-hit villages. Dr. Swati Jha, Chandrakant Deshpande and Anusha Ravishankar carried
out the first round of treatment from September
12-16. Other volunteer doctors sent by
partner organizations continued treating patients until AmeriCares second
medical team arrived to conduct operations for an additional week.
AmeriCares India worked with six partners in the Orissa region, treating
survivors suffering with flood related fungal infections, fever, cold, cough,
upper and lower respiratory infections, gastrointestinal infections, ear, eye
and skin infections, body aches and flood-related injuries. In addition, the
medical teams managed hypertensive patients and provided supportive treatment to
diabetics and expectant mothers.
To ensure that survivors had access to clean water, AmeriCares India supplied enough water purification tablets to provide 15,500 families with water for one month, along with nutritional supplements to 100 expectant mothers and clothing for young children. In total, 2,400 patients from 14 villages received crucial medical aid from the two teams.
“We are grateful to AmeriCares India for introducing us to this aspect of medicine by bringing us here to be a part of the humanitarian aid action and supplying quality medicines, said Dr. Chetan Chaudhari of one of AmeriCares partner organizations - Doctors for You. “We are also thankful for the successful and effective logistics of the entire aid operation.”

Meanwhile, AmeriCares India continued to expand flood relief efforts, working
with local NGOs to reach more flood survivors each day. Dr. Shital Raval-Patel and Chandu Deshpande
along with a team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital
were dispatched to the Kendrapara and Jajpur
districts to treat an additional 350 patients and provide nutritional
supplements to survivors in five villages inundated by floodwaters.
AmeriCares has delivered more than $50 million worth of critical medicines and
supplies to India to date – a figure that continues to grow significantly
through the AmeriCares India office in Mumbai. In 2010, AmeriCares India
donated products directly to 35 health care institutions in over 13 states.



