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Todd Shea is an unlikely savior. But the people he helps don't care that he was once a crack addict or know that they've also been saviors to him. Download PDF

The Improbable American:

Despite no college education or a medical background, a rugged American named Todd Shea runs a charity hospital in Kashmir, where a 2005 earthquake killed 80,000 people.


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Pakistan Flood Relief

Feed a Family for a Week at $25

 

The catastrophe that has hit Pakistan is unprecedented. With one fifth of the country under water and 14 million lives displaced, this demands an unprecedented response. The UN says 8 million people will need food aid for the next three months.


Join Shine Humanity in a global drive to deliver Family Care Packages consisting of staple foods, infant formula, water, and basic hygiene products, enough for a family to survive for a week. Each package costs $25 and will be put together on the ground in Pakistan. Give at whatever level you can but please give.


Volunteers who would like to organize fund drives in your local communities please email us at info@shihumanity.org for more information.

 

Donation for Pakistan Flood Relief

Amount you would like to donate:

Official PayPal Seal $5 Feed a Family for a Day
$25 Feed a Family for a Week
$100 Feed a Family for a Month
$500 Feed Five Families for a Month

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August 30th, 2010


“Only the flint-hearted could be left unmoved by this. The heart aches for Pakistan.”

“It is the sheer scale of the devastation that leaves one speechless. As one surveys the overhead photos of vast lowland plains inundated with swirling brown water or stares at the upland images of mighty torrents washing away roads, bridges, entire villages, it is the utter scope of the disaster which almost defies comprehension, which far outstrips the power of words to convey.
Only the flint-hearted could be left unmoved by this. The heart aches for Pakistan.
In these images one looks in vain for signs of hysteria, or for righteous indignation. What one sees instead is what one always sees in Pakistanis - endurance: Simple, often noble, endurance.”
Robert Grenier was the CIA's chief of station in Islamabad, Pakistan, from 1999 to 2002. He was also the director of the CIA's counter-terrorism centre.

“Pakistan's children don’t understand donor fatigue; they just want water, food & shelter” Queen Rania on Twitter  

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

Overview
Over the last 10 days, SHINE Humanity has scaled up its ground operations to meet the rising urgency on the ground. We now have six medical teams on the ground working the across the flood-affected deltas, up from Gilgit in the north, down to Khaipur in the south. Working in partnership with regional host agencies, our medical teams are seeing over 800 patients a day vaccinating children and the elderly; treating a large number of water-borne diseases, and infections; dealing with cases of extreme malnutrition and dehydration; as well as counseling patients with anxiety and depression.

 

In each of these communities, we are already delivering food aid and water or are in the process of making arrangements to do so. We are also  supporting livelihood initiatives, from lift pumps to drain farmlands, to flour mills to salvage residual crops. We have close to 50 team members working around the clock, supported by a growing international team of dedicated volunteers collecting funds and supplies to help the program grow and meet the challenge of saving lives and livelihoods, and return these communities to semblance of self-reliance. Among the highlights of our recent efforts have been:

 

  • The opening of a Mother-Child Center at District Charsadda Hospital which will help deal with the surge in pediatric and maternal health cases. This is a joint effort between SHINE Humanity, the Pakistan Pediatric Association, and Ayub Medical College which will provide trained physicians and specialists to help staff the center.
  • The movement of three medical teams into Sindh based out of Sukkur, Hyderabad and Khaipur. Sindh as seen over 148 villages wiped out by the flood waters and 1,200 km of roads have been destroyed. Our doctors and EMTs are treating cases of severe dedydration and malnutrition, and were horrified to find by starvation. We are currently trying to establish food lines into these locations.
  • SHINE Humanity has deployed a medical team to Jaffarabad in Balochistan province after receiveing a desperate plea for help from a local non-profit. We will try to deliver food and water if deemed necessary.
  • A medical team equipped with medicines and some food supplies will shortly be on its way to Kolistan. We also have a team scheduled to depart for Gilgit, at the request of the regional authorities there. Another joint medical team with UM Healthcare Trust and SHINE Humanity is due to depart for Skardu shortly.
  • We have successfully initiated a livelihood initiative with the use of lift pumps to drain agrcultural farmlands, and floue mills to grind wheat and corn salvaged from flood waters. This will help restore some semblance of self-sufficiency and reduce dependence on food aid. SHINE Humanity was also instrumental in saving 7,000 bee hives, rescuing an entire cottage industry on the brink of collapse.
  • We presently have trucks of food, clothes and shoes enroute to Shangla, in Swat.
  • Pakistan pop artists Noori have launched a campaign for backpacks full of seasonal gifts for children traumatised by the recent floods. These will be taken up-country by our teams and distributed among the children before the end of the fasting month. To read more, visit Noori’s blog at http://nooriworld.net/2010/08/24/noori-vblog-10-flood-relief/.
  • Todd Shea, COO of SHINE Humanity, is scheduled to record a single with Pakistan music icon, Atif Aslam. The proceeds from the sales will go to benefit victims of the floods.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

Field Updates
Here are some of the recent field reports we have received from team members and collaborating agencies:

Date: Aug 28th, 2010
District: Hyderabad
Province: Sindh
“Using funds raised by SHINE Humanity donors, we were able to purchase different food items, plastic mats, medicines, hand fans, drinking water and a water tank for  refugees living in a school opposite Custom House, Hyderabad. There is camp where around 600 dislocated villagers are living. These families come from surrounding areas of Jacobabad and Matiari.”
Report written by Dr Muhammad Sharif, USI Field Officer, Mirpurkhas,Badin & Tando Allahyar
Micro Nutrient Initiative, Contact: 0333-2609676

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

Date: Thursday, Aug 26, 2010
Village :Ghazodheri
Tehsil :Tangi
District : Charsadda
“Our team went to village Ghazodheri to establish a medical camp. We treated a total number of 216 patients, with eye infections, skin diseases, respiratory tract infections, and gastroenteritis due to constant exposure to dirty and stagnant water.

 

“A very interesting case was a young boy who presented to Dr. Haidar with severe bone deformities.  We suspected a case of rickets, but due to poverty, his family was unable to take him to a tertiary case hospital for further diagnosis and management.  Other cases were skin infections that had not been treated and thus resulted in large pustules all of the body, gastroenteritis and severe vomiting, and infected eyes that had turned green and swollen due to lack of care.  All of these patients were treated with i/v fluids, antibiotics, and given medicines to take home to continue their treatments.  We also delivered water purification tablets and prophylactic doses of anti-malaria drugs to prevent the outbreak of diseases going forward.”
Report written by Dr. Haidar Ali, Medical Officer, UM Healthcare

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

Date: Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Village: Sangerh
Tehsil: Tangi
District: Charsadda
“Today was another rainy day, and our team set out for Sangerh for our medical camp. Sangerh was in the direct path of the flood and was severely devastated by the fast flowing Swat River. Seventy per cent of the houses in this village were obliterated by the flood flow and the village is now no longer easily approachable by road. Our team established the camp in a flood shattered home within the village. The electricity is still not restored in the area (despite being four weeks since the flood first reached this village).

 

“A male patient treated by Dr. Haidar with a high grade fever, cough, and conjunctivitis. He was treated with i/v antibiotics and given medications to take home. An elderly female presented with a headache, but on examination her Blood Pressure (BP) was highly elevated (210/100) and was in a state of depression. After giving advice on how to manage her high BP, our medical team counseled her as to how to manage her health better.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

“There was an air of depression and death in the atmosphere. Almost all the villagers here have lost everything in the flood- including shelter, clothes, and all of their savings. Having nothing left, they have a difficult time ahead of them on how to rebuild their lives. We treated a total number of 110 patients with eye infections, skin diseases, respiratory tract infections, gastroenteritis, and a few cases of malaria.”
Report prepared by Dr. Haider Ali, Medical Officer at UM Healthcare Trust.

 

Date: Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Village: Jalhar
Tehsil: Tangi
District: Charsadda
“On Tuesday our team went to Jalhar to establish a medical camp. One male patient who was treated by Dr. Haidar with gastroenteritis was extremely weak. He had been suffering from constant diarrhea, vomiting and fever. He was treated with i/v antibiotics and fluids, and medications were given to him to take home. He had not seen a doctor in weeks since the floods had begun and was now in critical stage.

 

“A female patient was presented with pustules covering her body from contact with dirty water. She was also treated with antibiotics and anti-malaria drugs. We delivered water purification tablets and prophylactic doses of antimalarial drugs to all of the patients to prevent any further outbreaks. We treated 172 patients with most patients suffering from skin diseases, respiratory tract infections, eye infections and gastroenteritis.”
Report was prepared by Dr. Haider Ali, Medical Officer at UM Healthcare Trust.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

Date: Monday, August 23, 2010
Village: Namo
Tehsil:  Tangi
District: Charsadda
“Our team established a camp in Namo today, comprising of Dr. Haidar Ali from UM Healthcare and paramedics from SHINE Humanity. The locals were very happy when they heard about the camp, as there were many people with skin diseases and gastroenteritis due to the stagnant water remaining after the floods. The village relied heavily on water from open water wells for hundreds of years. After the floods, almost all of them were contaminated, clogged or no longer functioning. There was a lot of mud, debris (including bricks and trash) and sections were broken up.  Therefore, drinkable water sources were limited and many of the villages were suffering from dehydration.

 

“Dr. Haidar saw one young woman semi-conscious with severe dehydration who was unable to move her limbs due to weakness.  The team treated her with an i/v line of fluids, and she was able to leave the camp by foot after an hour. A male patient came in with an infected wound on his left foot.  We dressed his foot, gave antibiotics and pain killers, and he was also able to leave shortly.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

“We delivered water purification tablets and prophylactic doses of antimalarial drugs to prevent any future outbreaks, and our team also vaccinated the people against typhoid cholera and influenza.  We packed up around noon and reached home before evening. We treated 152 patients there, with skin disease as the most prevalent ailment, followed by eye infections and gastroenteritis.”
Report was prepared by Dr. Haider Ali, Medical Officer at UM Healthcare Trust.

 

Date: August 19th, 2010
Village: Kheshgi Payan
District: Nowshera
“Our relief teams had received requests from local people in Nowshera to arrange visits there, due to dearth of medical teams in the region. We had been to several villages and some parts of the cantonment in Nowshera last week but our primary focus this week had been Charsadda District. The team therefore decided to revisit certain areas in Nowshera that had not received any help, viewing the local’s concerns. The temperatures had risen again after spells of intermittent rainfall and it was a hot day. We had selected Kheshgi Payan as our camp site this time. Kheshgi is a village situated on the bank of River Kabul between Nowshera and Charsadda. It has a population of about 50,000 depending primarily on dairy cattle for a living. Most of their livestock and farms have been destroyed by the floods.

 

“Due to its location by the river bank, the village was one of the first to get flooded. And since it took very long for the water to recede from these areas, it was one of the last to receive aid from relief agencies. We could still observe large areas of land covered by stagnant water three weeks into the disaster. Even though the locals donated precious land for a Rural Health Centre which was constructed three years ago, lack of medicines and equipment meant the sprawling building was of no use to the people who took their patients to Nowshera or Peshawar.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

“Our camp was in a house next to the Government Primary School, which has also been converted into a refugee shelter. The ground all around was covered in 3 to 6 inches of silt deposited by the flood water, which makes walking difficult at times. Alongside the medicines, we distributed food supplies and bottled water to everyone arriving at the camp.

 

“Poor hygiene and lack of insight into disease spread patterns is causing the outbreak of diseases like cholera and scabies in flood affected areas. We are trying to mitigate this by counseling people on good hygiene practices and preventive measures to adopt. In this time where government and private sector resources are over-stretched this is the only way forward.”
Report  prepared by Dr. Qasim, Medical Officer at UM Healthcare Trust.

 

SHINE Humanity Team in the News
Todd Shea, COO SHINE HUmanity was a guest onthe Marc Steiner show on WEAA, the NPR station for Maryland. Listen on-line to the interview at http://www.steinershow.org/radio/the-marc-steiner-show/august-23-2010-segment-1. Todd was also featured in a recent piece in Foreign Policy magazine’s on-line edition at http://afpak.foreignpolicy.com/.

 

Dr Salman Naqvi was a sepaker at a recent rally at University of California, Los Angeles, following which he was interviewed on Fox News. Read coverage on the rally at http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pakistan-aid-20100830,0,3306634.story.

 

Events/Fundraising
A number of recent initiatives have successfully raised awareness and funds for the on-going mission in Pakistaan. “The Indus Overflows” initiated a thoughtful conversation on the floods and the action plan hereon to deal with the aftermath. The $130,000 raised from the benefit went to SHINE Humanity and Doctors Without Borders. Our deepest gratitude to our hosts, Hina and Asad Abidi, Shaila and Tahir Andrabi and Durianaz and Adil Farooqui, without whom none of this would have been possible.

 

The SHINE Humanity Food Drive has raised close to $8,000 in food aid for the most needy. This effort is being spearheaded by California volunteers and is based on donation cans and and an on-line campaign  being promoted on Facebook and other social media. The initiative has been taken up by volunteers in Houston, Texas who have launched parallel efforts in their state. The Texas team promises an evening of night criket and a coffee morning as some of the upcoming initiatives.

 

Pakistan Flood Crisis

 

A garage sale put together by supporters Tahereh Shirazi and Kamila Jeevanjee brought in $1,200 for victims of the floods. The two ladies worked tirelessly around the clock for several days to hold a successful one-day event in Orange County.

 

Huma and Amir Latif of Los Angeles have collected two container loads of donated food, clothes, medicines and shoes which are now enroute from the US to Pakistan. They will be trucked by road form the port of Karachi, to Swat where the donated items will be distributed. Thank you Huma and Amir.

Volunteer News
Dr Rafi Ahmed left Los Angeles last week  to lead a team into Khaipur. Originally from Chicago, Rafi  moved to Los Angeles for medical school. During medical school, he was especially interested in public health and in particular, and enjoyed working with under-served populations.  At the present time, he is a resident in Internal Medicine at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center- a county hospital that provides care to anyone who needs it regardless of financial or social situation. Once he completes his residency, he hopes to pursue a fellowship in Hematology and Oncology. Good luck and God’s speed Dr. Ahmed.

 

 

Our Thanks
We want to thank the following colleagues:

  • Media Flint, for hosting and promoting our web site, www.shinehumanity.org
  • Eckova Productions for producing the film promoting our efforts in the flood affected areas
  • Global Imprints for producing for us silicone bands to be used in raising funds and awareness

We would not be anywhere without all your generous support. 

 

Follow Us
Join the SHINE Humanity Facebook page at
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/group.php?gid=119633894754626&ref=ts

 





Augt 22nd 2010, Augt 16th 2010, Augt 11th 2010, Augt 6th 2010,
Augt 5th 2010, Aug 3rd 2010



 

 

 


Pakistan bank account information for direct wire transfers is as follows:

 

Account Name: Comprehensive Disaster Response Services
Branch Code: 0593
Account Number: 0593-01-01-004883-2
Swift Code: MUCBPKKA
MCB Main Branch Muzaffarabad, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan


U.S. bank account information for direct wire transfers is as follows:

 

Account Name: SHINE
Account contact person: Laila Karamally
Contact address: 10 Roseleaf Irvine CA92620
Contact phone:
714 261 1044
Branch Code: 0593
Account Number:
23411 69564
Bank Name: Bank of America, Heritage Village
Bank Address: 14222 Culver Dr 
Bank City: Irvine
Bank State:CA
SWIFT Code: BOFAUS3N
ABA Routing number : 121 000 358; 0260009593

 

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For the Haiti Earthquake Relief Mission, SHINE/CDRS partnered with Aimer Haiti, The Islamic Medical Association of North America, JP / HRO Foundation, Destiny World Outreach Missions and other many fine organizations,

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