American Fork physician Gary Garner wakes up early Saturday morning at the makeshift camp at the airport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, made up primarily of Utah humanitarians.
Mike Terry, Deseret News
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Sitting in a makeshift camp on the infield weeds of the Port-au-Prince airport with jet engines roaring 100 yards away, a group of doctors and emergency workers shared the tragedy and triumph of a week in post-earthquake Haiti.
They amputated limbs and performed skin grafts. They sometimes operated without X-rays, relying on the sense of touch. They cleaned and dressed open wounds. And an emergency room nurse delivered a baby.
"Every day has been a new adventure with new plans that constantly change," said Steve Hansen, a St. George orthopedic surgeon.
On the eve of their scheduled Saturday return, the group slept on mattresses and in a cardboard-and-plastic shelter near pallets of supplies. During the week, others wanted to know what organization they represented. After hearing the question numerous times, they settled on Doctors Without Names.
But they do have names. In addition to Hansen is Chuck Peterson, of Mesa, Ariz.; and Gary Garner and Craig Nelson, both of American Fork.
"It was the most amazing experience I've ever had," said Garner, a pain medication specialist.
The four doctors and Washington County search and rescue team members worked in Leogane, a town of 65,000 people 40 miles west of the capital city, and one of the hardest hit in last week's temblor. An estimated 15,000 of the city's people died. Ninety percent of the mostly cinder-block houses were pancaked. A 300-year-old cathedral erected with sea coral lay in ruins.
"These people have been living under tarps because they're afraid to go in their homes, if their homes were still standing," said Hansen, who, along with Peterson and Nelson, had served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Haiti 20 years ago.
Some lay in the streets with bones protruding from skin, sick with infection. Children lay scalded by hot cooking oil or boiling water that spilled over when the earth rumbled.
The surgeons set up shop in an open-air school, using bleachers as an operating table and an old desk as a stool. They lacked some surgical instruments but made the best of what they had with the help of German, Cuban, Canadian and Mennonite medical teams on the scene. They had to do some horrible things.
Hansen amputated a 58-year-old woman's leg below the knee with a sterilized Leatherman.
"I used the saw to cut the bone," he said.
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