Direct Relief | Hurricane Harvey Update

Hurricane Harvey Disaster Relief and Recovery Fund
August 30, 2017

Direct Relief

Direct Relief has been on the ground in Texas since last week, assessing medical needs of community clinics and health centers. Over the weekend, Direct Relief committed an initial $200,000 in cash support and made available its entire inventory of more than $100 million in medicines and supplies.

Ten shipments of medical aid are expected to go out Wednesday from Direct Relief to clinics in Houston, Dallas, Katy, Beaumont, and other impacted communities. Yesterday, Direct Relief sent out six shipments of crucial emergency supplies to communities reeling from rising waters and Hurricane Harvey impacts. All six shipments went out to Community Health Centers of South Central Texas. The center’s site in Victoria was particularly hard-hit by the storm’s impact, where power remained down for many and significant flooding from the Guadalupe River threatened to impact nearby cities.

Direct Relief had prepositioned 11 Hurricane Preparedness Packs in the storm’s path in Texas, each pack filled with essential medicines and supplies for use should clinics need them. Seven of the packs have been opened and are now being used to treat patients. The Lone Star Family Health Center in Conroe, the Galveston County Health District, Healthcare for the Homeless in Houston, and Community Health Centers of South Central Texas in Gonzales are among the clinics that had packs that are now open and being used to treat patients.

Direct Relief is in communication with more than 60 partners throughout Texas, ten of whom are reviewing offers of assistance currently. Additional assistance is being targeted to clinics in Dallas expected to assist evacuees.

As the storm moves into western Louisiana, many clinics in the area are bracing for impacts. Ten of Direct Relief’s partner clinics are in the path of the storm in Louisiana, and one clinic has confirmed they’ve opened their Hurricane Preparedness Pack. The Martin Luther King Health Center in Shreveport, Louisiana. Clinic staff reported that shelters have been set up in that community for evacuees coming from Houston, and around 3,500 people seeking shelter are expected in Shreveport as a result.

Thousands have fled their homes for shelter, with the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, where a major shelter has been established, serving as a temporary space for more than 9,000 people, almost double the center’s capacity. Direct Relief has been communicating with medical staff at the convention center to determine needs. Other major shelters have been established in Dallas and San Antonio. Medical resources are in high demand from those without access to medications to manage chronic conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure. Without medication and management, conditions like these can lead to life-threatening symptoms.

Direct Relief will continue working to bolster healthcare providers with these critical medications and supplies.

Your support makes these stories possible.

Invest in a better world