Thursday, April 14, 2011

Jamaica 1st stop on US hospital ship's tour

An enormous U.S. Navy hospital ship brought state-of-the-art medical attention to Jamaica on Thursday, the beginning point of a five-month goodwill mission to nine countries in the Caribbean and Latin America.

The 894-foot (272-meter) white ship emblazoned with vivid red crosses carries more than 600 personnel who will offer free surgical procedures, pediatric and dental care, and eye treatment to roughly 100,000 patients in 9 countries, said U.

. Navy Capt. David K. Weiss, the ship's commanding officer for medical treatment.

In Kingston's harbor, dozens of patients strapped on life vests and boarded small boats to give the anchored Comfort, a converted oil tanker with operating rooms, a blood bank, dental ward, pharmacy, intensive care unit and built-in oxygen lines run to the beds.

Dr. Melody Ennis, of Jamaica's Ministry of Health, said patients have been screened in progress and the Caribbean island will allow the appropriate follow-up care in upcoming weeks.

During a roughly 10-day stint in Jamaica, the Baltimore-based ship's staff and volunteers will also train local health providers, disburse donations, and fixing a train in Trenchtown, a gritty Kingston ghetto where late reggae greats Bob Marley and Peter Tosh once lived.

The Comfort's commanding officer, U.S. Navy Capt. Brian C. Nickerson, said the humanitarian mission allows military force to make stronger relationships with government in the region.

"This actually makes us better prepared when we give to get together in multiplication of disaster," Nickerson said during a spell given to reporters shortly afterwards the ship's arrival.

Nickerson said the U.S. Navy's annual humanitarian deployment to the area had aught to due with countering leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's influence. "These are our neighbors. . We should be capable to turn side by side," he said.

Medical diplomacy has long been practised in the region, most notably by Cuba's communist government, which each year sends thousands of doctors to furnish free care in poor countries in the region. Venezuela also funds many of these missions.

The Comforter is one of the U.S. Navy's two hospital ships. One of its primary missions is to handle the wounded during a war. During the Iraq War, it took on casualties while floating in the Persian Gulf.

The Console also docked in New York shortly afterwards the Sept. 11 attacks in New York, providing housing for Ground zero workers. And it provided attention to thousands of Haitians after the Caribbean country's cataclysmic Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake.

After Jamaica, the Comfort sets sail for Peru. It also plans to visit Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Haiti before wrapping up its tour.

The hospital ship could be diverted if a major disaster strikes during the deployment, said U.S. Navy Capt. Kathy Becker, a native of Morgantown, Kentucky.

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