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Cuba-bound supplies to aid hospitals

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 6, 2008 at 03:21 PM

Cuba-bound supplies to aid hospitals
Local effort ****ps used equipment to Caribbean
Alexandra Zabjek, Journal Staff Writer
Published: 2:32 am

EDMONTON - Clipboard in hand, Jean Enarson stood in an Edmonton 
warehouse Saturday morning, carefully checking off items destined for
Cuba.

One X-ray machine? Check. Two industrial-sized washers? Check. Stacks of 
beds? Check.

The items are part of a huge collection of medical equipment that a 
group of Albertans recovered from the East Central Health Region for 
needy Cuban hospitals. "In Cuba, a lot of the hospitals haven't had 
their equipment modernized since Castro (came to power in 1959)," said 
Al Bergsma, who helped organized the ****pment. "We're putting equipment 
with lots of life left in it back in hospitals."

Last year, Bergsma, from Rocky Mountain House, noticed some area 
hospitals were updating their equipment and wondered what would happen 
to the old items. He spoke with Dale Enarson, a friend through the 
Evangelical Free Church of Canada, who had done several mission trips in 
Cuba.

The idea of sending second-hand medical equipment to the Caribbean 
country was soon born.

The Alberta group partnered with MEMO Cuba, a Ontario-based organization 
that has been ****pping used medical supplies to developing countries 
since 2004. MEMO has co-ordinated with medical staff in Cuba to ensure 
the equipment is distributed to hospitals in need.

Last year, Bergsma wondered if his group could assemble enough supplies 
to fill even one ****pping container.

Dale Enarson drove to hospitals in places such as Viking, Vermillion and 
Tofield to collect beds, incubators, walkers and IV poles. The hospitals 
were eager to give away thousands of kilograms of equipment that would 
have otherwise landed in a scrapyard.

In the end, the group managed to fill two full containers. "What started 
as a seed of a thought ended up as something much larger," Bergsma said.

Dale Enarson was a big player in the initiative until he fell gravely 
ill a few months ago. Days before his death, he lay in a hospital bed 
but was still taking phone calls about the project.

"He was passionate about this right to the end," said his widow, Jean 
Enarson.

This most recent ****pment was done in his memory.

It costs about $12,500 to send a container from Edmonton to Cuba via 
Halifax. The money is collected through donations and fundraising. "This 
is God's work," said Jean Enarson. "We're all in it for the betterment 
of humanity."

azabjek@[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 




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Cuba-bound supplies to aid hospitals
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-06 15:21:47 

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tan12V112 Sun Oct 12 14:02:20 CDT 2008.