2010-07-29 / Community

Spinal neurosurgeon committed to helping Haitian orphans recover

By Sylvie Belmond belmond@theacorn.com

GENTLE CARE—Spinal neurosurgeon Dr. Ian Armstrong treats a patient injured during Haiti’s devastating earthquake. Armstrong is working with local business leaders to rebuild an orphanage that houses about 130 children and several handicapped adults in Port-au-Prince. GENTLE CARE—Spinal neurosurgeon Dr. Ian Armstrong treats a patient injured during Haiti’s devastating earthquake. Armstrong is working with local business leaders to rebuild an orphanage that houses about 130 children and several handicapped adults in Port-au-Prince. A Westlake Village-based spinal neurosurgeon has traveled twice to Haiti since it was hit with a magnitude 7 earthquake in January, focusing his volunteer efforts on a dilapidated orphanage in Port-au- Prince, the nation’s capital.

After returning from his first trip to the country, which he made just 12 days after the earthquake hit, Dr. Ian Armstrong asembled a group of local business owners with diverse skills to help repair the orphanage, which houses 130 children.

Although recovery is slow, Armstrong said Americans should not lose faith in the Haitian people.

“The country was in dire straits before the earthquake, but then it had a disaster on top of it. Yet the people are very resilient and amazingly warm, and they’re joyful in spite of their circumstances,” he said.

The father of three said one of the most touching moments of his first weeklong stay in Haiti was when a mother wandered into the New Life Children’s Home near Port-au-Prince with her young son Caleb.

The boy had been trapped under the rubble and unconscious for several days. He had many abrasions and sustained a massive skull fracture, said Armstrong, who admitted the boy into a makeshift clinic at the orphanage for observation.

During the next few days the mother never left her son’s bedside, Armstrong said.

“But what impressed me most is when we were about to leave Haiti this mother asked us if we could take Caleb with us. She was desperate for help and willing to let him go because she wanted him to do well medically,” he said.

Upon his return to California, Armstrong stayed in contact with a nurse at the orphanage to check up on Caleb and other patients, and he vowed to help the orphanage for the long term.

“I came back attached to this orphanage. It was hard to leave, but I realized that I could work the phones and talk to people to garner more support,” Armstrong said.

The New Life Children’s Home was established in 1976 by Miriam Frederick of World Harvest Missions Outreach.

In addition to receiving housing, food and schooling, children who live at the compound receive spiritual guidance and learn life skills such as farming and fishing. Volunteers go on medical missions, taking supplies and caring for patients outside of the orphanage.

“While I could not grasp how to help the entire problem in Haiti, the orphanage allowed me to focus my desire to help,” Armstrong said.

“(The orphanage) was, on a small scale, doing what we all want to do for the country and was doing it quite well for decades,” he said. “So to come alongside them and help them rebuild and get back on their feet is the best thing to do.”

Armstrong became acquainted with the orphanage on Jan. 24 when he and about 40 volunteers went on a relief mission to Haiti with the Transformational Development Agency, a Westlake Village nonprofit. The group included about 20 members of Calvary Community Church.

Doctors, nurses and other volunteers set up improvised medical clinics in tent cities and performed urgent procedures on patients who had sustained spinal cord and other injuries, such as pelvic and skull fractures.

Participants also set up an extended care facility at the New Life orphanage to nurse victims back to health.

In late March, Armstrong returned to Port-au-Prince to meet with leaders at the orphanage and check on their medical needs.

He brought along his friend, Vince Daly, a Westlake Village developer, to assess structural damage at the orphanage and create a plan for reconstruction.

Daly said he was overwhelmed at first by the desolation in Haiti and wasn’t sure how to help, but he stuck with it because he, too, grew fond of the orphanage and its residents.

“The thing that’s really great about the orphanage is that it’s a center for an entire subregion. Every day a group is going out to tent cities to give out food and medical supplies, and they also bring people in to treat them,” Daly said.

On June 23, Daly returned to Port-au-Prince to continue the work he had started at the orphanage.

Armstrong was unable to make that trip, but he sponsored two local young filmmakers, Spencer Daly, Vince’s son, and Chad Smathers, to make a documentary about the children’s home and set up a computer system that will allow the orphanage to stream videos online.

“We want to create an Internet presence so sponsors can witness accomplishments at the orphanage and to encourage long-term commitments. The goal is to familiarize people with the orphanage and get them to adopt the orphanage directly,” Armstrong said.

Armstrong said he and his partners also plan to install solar panels on buildings in the 3- acre compound to create a reliable source of electricity.

“It takes very little to do something significant in Haiti, and it’s an amazing opportunity to help shape that country’s future,” he said.

Frederick said the earthquake made everything worse in Haiti, but Armstrong’s actions saved many lives, and he restored hope at the orphanage.

“Dr. Ian has been an answer to our prayers,” she said.

Once reconstruction is complete, the orphanage will have medical and dental facilities and comfortable housing for both children and handicapped adults, Frederick said.

For more information about the orphanage, visit New Life Children’s Home at http:// whmnewlife.org.

Return to top