Head of Emergency Medicine Returns from Latest Disaster Relief Mission

The Health Center's Dr. Fuller joined the emergency response in St. Lucia after Hurricane Tomas.

<p>Dr. Robert Fuller, head of emergency medicine at the Health Center, is a volunteer with the International Medical Corp. Photo provided by the UConn Health Center</p>
Dr. Robert Fuller, head of emergency medicine at the Health Center, is a volunteer with the International Medical Corp. Photo provided by the UConn Health Center

Dr. Robert Fuller, head of emergency medicine at the Health Center, has just returned from an emergency response trip to St. Lucia, after Hurricane Tomas caused severe damage throughout the island. Fuller, a physician-volunteer with the International Medical Corp (IMC), was deployed a week ago to run the IMC’s emergency response effort, after the hurricane damaged a local hospital.

Despite landslides that severely damaged roads and access to affected communities, the emergency response team helped deliver healthcare, water/sanitation, and hygiene assistance to the more than 65,000 residents affected by the disaster.

“The lack of running water is likely to continue for some time,” said Fuller. “Food supplies in many of the areas are also low. Our team is distributing food and water, in addition to blankets, clothing, and tarps.”

The International Medical Corps helped equip St. Jude Hospital’s temporary facility, which serves an estimated 66,000, with donated medicine, supplies, and critical equipment. The team has also been training hospital staff.

Fuller has taken part in several disaster relief efforts in recent years. In another IMC mission, he was among the first physicians to arrive in Port-au-Prince following the earthquake that devastated Haiti in January. In 2004, he travelled to Indonesia after the tsunami that killed 300,000 people. Fuller also took a sabbatical from the Health Center last year to work in Ecuador. He provided his emergency medicine expertise in an inner-city hospital in the country’s biggest city, Guayaquil, whose patients are mostly poor and underserved.