Tampabay.com
JANUARY 30, 2010

Did Charlie Crist halt Haiti help flights? No.

A New
York Times story
says the military halted Haitian medical-evacuation flights
to Florida after a dispute with Florida Gov. Charlie Crist over who pays for
care.

Here's the problem: It looks like a one-sided dispute. Crist doesn't look
like he threw down any gauntlet at all.

Instead, on Jan. 27, three days ago, he sent HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
a letter that asked her to activate the National Disaster Medical System to
help coordinate the state-side response, provide states more more federal
financial and for the feds to start sending Haitian earthquake victims to other
states because Florida hospital emergency rooms can't continue handling a flux
of earthquake victims.

Crist even signed the letter in his blue Sharpie with an enthusiastic "Great
to talk with you yesterday!"

How this letter could be misinterpreted is a testament to the fog of managing
a disaster and/or a severe case of bureaucracy run amok by President Obama's
administration or the military or both. There's also the possibility the Times
got the story wrong, as Crist suggested this morning, but it looks as if the
paper just reported the facts at hand. And HHS doesn't look like it was much
help in talking to the reporter.

Crist just sent out a statement saying that, just last night up to 80 Haitian
orphans arrived in Florida. "Let me be clear - at no time has Florida closed our
doors to those impacted by the earthquake in Haiti," Crist said.

Here are excerpts of his letter:

Unfortunately, communication with an appropriate federal lead agency and
the lack of coordination by federal authorities has been challenging. However,
Florida’s “Operation Haiti Relief” team has done everything we can to ensure
repatriated citizens are smoothly transitioned through international airports,
their medical evacuation flights are coordinated, and they are directly admitted
into Florida hospitals.

As a result, Florida’s health care system is quickly reaching saturation,
especially in the area of high level trauma care. We will not be able to sustain
these efforts alone. Therefore the State of Florida is respectfully requesting
that you activate the National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) to assist in
distributing these critically ill medical patients to other state and ensure
states are appropriately reimbursed for their services…..

Florida’s “Operation Haiti Relief” team has worked with deployed staff, 24
hours a day at key sites throughout the state. This is an effort of
unprecedented scope and the following is a snapshot of Florida’s activity to
date:

*15,411 repatriation passengers on 660 flights
*436 have been admitted
to hospitals, greater than 90% of these patients have been multiple
trauma
*25% of these patients have been under the age of 18

Recently, we learned that federal planning is underway to move between
30-50 critically ill patients per day for an indefinite period of time. Florida
does not have the capacity to support such an operation.

Additional factors complicate Florida’s current healthcare system capacity
and we are at current peak from winter tourism and seasonal residence
migration.Florida has fully supported the federal mission during this crisis,
but we need you to assist us by establishing a process through NDMS to better
manager and support these critically injured patients…

Download
2010 1 28 Operation Haiti Relief - Secretary Sebelius

-- Marc Caputo

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