Overview

First — Do No Harm. This principle has guided Catholic health care since the founding of our ministry and it must also guide our disaster response efforts — both domestically and internationally.

CHA is oftentimes called in times of disaster: by those in the midst of a disaster, asking for us to help coordinate potential response resources; and by those who would like information on how they might best provide assistances to impacted health care organizations and devastated communities. While CHA is a resource for members, our best ability in disaster response lies in sharing relevant, timely information by hosting networking calls on specific disaster areas, and also, in sharing links where information is provided to known, trusted resources — particularly as they relate to our Catholic ministry. A listing of such organizations and items are included on this page.

Please feel free to recommend and share any additional items by contacting Bruce Compton, CHA's senior director of Global Health, who is also available if you are looking to be connected with resources.


Upcoming Events

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CHA & Catholic Relief Services Urgent Response for Earthquake in Turkey and Syria

On February 6, 2023, a 7.8-magnitude earthquake devastated large areas of central Turkey and northwest Syria. The death toll is in the thousands and continues to climb. It is the worst earthquake to strike the region this century.
Learn more on how to donate to the relief efforts
 

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Families across East Africa are facing drought and hunger.

Famine could be on the horizon in Somalia — without your immediate support. Communities are experiencing extreme water shortages, and nearly 3 million people have been displaced. More than 1 million children under age 5 are facing acute malnutrition — without help now, nearly 330,000 are at risk of dying.

Hunger Crisis in East Africa


Resources


What's the Best Way to Help? Watch this video.


Most Effective Practices, Cautions & Considerations

There are many considerations for Catholic Health Care ministries when responding to disasters that are not in their own markets — in support of the mission to "Go and Do Likewise." Review Most Effective practices, cautions and considerations.

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Donating/Connecting to Catholic Agencies

Here are agencies Catholic health care ministries can contact to donate money or learn needs, as well as some specific links to useful resources on each of their websites.

Catholic Charities USA Catholic Relief Services

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops


Prayer Resources in Times of Disaster



Relief groups rally to help those sheltering in Ukraine, fleeing the country

Apr 1, 2022, 01:00 AM
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By LISA EISENHAUER

Catholic relief groups and other organizations providing humanitarian support to Ukrainians who are fleeing or sheltering in place amid the invasion by Russian forces say the need for assistance is great.


Refugees from Ukraine pick up supplies just across the border in Palanca, Moldova. Groups within the Caritas International confederation are helping stock and staff sites inside Ukraine and in bordering nations that provide shelter and necessities for people displaced by the Russian invasion. CHA says best practice in this international crises is to donate money to relief agencies rather than send goods.
JCaritas International/Marijn Fidder

The effort to meet that need is hampered by the closure of major highways as military forces position themselves and by active combat including rocket and missile strikes in urban centers and residential neighborhoods. Relief organizations also face challenges accessing cash inside Ukraine as other nations respond to Russia's aggression by closing off financial networks.

"The situation, as we all know, is very volatile," Moira Monacelli, director of the Vatican-based aid group Caritas International said March 4. "It's changing day by day, hour by hour." Caritas is a confederation of 162 Catholic relief, development and social service organizations operating in Ukraine and over 200 countries and territories worldwide.

Monacelli was among representatives from several international humanitarian aid groups and U.S. Catholic health systems who discussed their efforts to bring in food and medical and other emergency supplies and assist Ukrainians hunkering down in place and those seeking refuge in other nations. They spoke during a networking Zoom call on March 4 that was organized by CHA.

Bruce Compton, CHA's senior director of global health, moderated the call. He said it was prompted by queries from CHA members about how to help a population under siege. "I know this is an extremely emotional time for all of us as we consider what is happening in Ukraine," Compton said.

The organizations represented on the call shared links to websites giving details on their respective aid efforts in the region and where donations are accepted. Those links can be found at chausa.org/global-health/Ukraine. The aid groups that took part in the call included:

On March 11, a week after the call, the U.S. Agency for International Development reported 549 civilians had been killed in the conflict — although media estimates were much higher as Catholic Health World went to press in mid-March. According to the USAID report, 12 million people were in need of humanitarian aid inside Ukraine and 2.5 million people were fleeing to neighboring countries. The United States is working with other governments and the United Nations to mount a global effort to provide food, shelter and security to Ukrainians in areas under siege and refugees who have fled to Poland and other border nations.


A woman and her daughter cross the border from Ukraine into Moldova after waiting for hours on March 1. By March 11, the U.S. Agency for International Development estimated that 2.5 million Ukrainians had fled to other nations in search of safety as the Russian assault on their homeland escalated.
JCaritas International/Marijn Fidder

Presenters on the CHA Zoom call discussed the importance of working through established and trusted partners to meet the critical food, shelter, fuel and transportation needs of Ukrainians in conflict zones and those fleeing to the relative safety of bordering nations.

Monacelli said the two member organizations within the Caritas confederation that are providing direct assistance in Ukraine have infrastructure in place in 65 locations in Ukraine and in neighboring countries, including Moldova, Poland, Romania, Hungary and Slovakia, all of which have opened their borders to refugees.

Monacelli said Caritas is providing shelter, transportation and psychosocial support to the traumatized victims of the invasion both inside Ukraine and in border nations.

Aid in various forms
Kevin Kostic, director of donor relations for Catholic Relief Services, said his organization is partnering with Caritas and other groups in its relief efforts. He shared photos from Ukraine taken since the Russian invasion began Feb. 24. One image showed elderly men and women sheltering in the cold cellar of a cathedral about 90 miles west of the capital city of Kyiv as bombs exploded outside.

"What we're hearing from Caritas Ukraine in particular is that older and sick people are really overwhelmed and often completely on their own," Kostic said on the call.

In the days following the CHA call, The Associated Press reported that Russia had widened its offensive. Its military had advanced on cities in eastern and southern Ukraine and continued to launch airstrikes on Kyiv and other urban centers. As the toll of dead and wounded climbed, the fighting left many homes and apartment buildings damaged or destroyed and civilians cut off from food, medicine and heat.

The work of Catholic Relief Services includes coordinating aid distribution with leaders of relief efforts in Ukraine and recruiting and mobilizing volunteers to help with humanitarian efforts and transporting children out of violent areas, he said.

Like representatives of other groups participating in the 90-minute CHA meeting, Kostic said the immediate need is for cash to fund efforts already underway.

'Doing is donating'
On the call just eight days after Russia began its invasion of Ukraine, multiple CHA member health systems indicated they already were providing cash support for humanitarian aid efforts.

Susan Huber is president of Ascension Global Mission, which oversees international aid efforts by the Ascension health system. She said Ascension is encouraging its associates and its suppliers who want to do something to help Ukrainians to stick with cash donations to established aid groups for now.

"Doing is donating because the people on the ground are the people who know what's needed, what they can get and how to access it," Huber said.

In time, she said, Ascension will work with its partner MedSurplus Alliance to send medical supplies that are specifically requested by the government or medical organizations in Ukraine. She said the health system bases its policies for aid donations on the best practices outlined by groups such as CHA and MedSurplus Alliance. One of those practices, she noted, is not to send unrequested donations of equipment and supplies.

Representatives from two systems — Bon Secours Mercy Health and Providence St. Joseph Health — shared on the call that they had made money commitments to Catholic Relief Services to support its Ukraine relief efforts. Bon Secours Mercy Health made an immediate pledge of $100,000.

Avoid harm
St. Joseph Community Partnership Fund, a grant-making affiliate of Providence St. Joseph Health, is matching up to $100,000 in donations from the health system's staffers. That system also plans to work with its partner Medical Teams International to send medical aid for the Ukrainian relief effort once humanitarian corridors have been secured.

"The first thing we want to do is listen to our partners and don't expect that we have the answers," said Justin Magouirk Crowe, Providence's senior vice president for community partnerships. "We're going to have a bigger impact if we listen first and do second."

In mid-March, CHA connected Bon Secours Mercy Health to a Polish nonprofit that used a financial donation from the health system to purchase needed medical equipment and supplies. CHA's Compton said the items arrived two business days after the donation.

In her closing remarks, Sr. Mary Haddad, RSM, president and chief executive officer of CHA, commended the Catholic health ministry for its continued commitment to global health and eagerness to aid the besieged people of Ukraine.

"As we plan our response, we must resist our desire to react," she said. "We must be intentional and thoughtful in providing coordinated care in order to avoid the pitfalls that all too often are wasteful and have the potential to cause more harm for those on the ground."

CHA's guidelines and resources for ethical disaster response can be found at chausa.org/disaster-resource-initiatives/overview.

Categories:
  • Disaster Response
Authors:
  • Lisa Eisenhauer
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