Photo Essay: After Helene, Health Workers Are a Lifeline for the Displaced
The team from International Medical Corps is delivering crucial care for the mind and body while the people of Asheville rebuild and recover.
Written by Jacob Roberts, Communications Specialist; Photos by Jacob Roberts, Lisa Fraumeni-Pickel, Kody Fuller Hurse, Meaghan Sydlowski First published October 29, 2024 by International Medical Corps
If you’re a volunteer nurse providing healthcare to people who have lost their homes after a disaster, your work is difficult enough already. But if electricity is unreliable and the local water system is no longer functional—the tap water is undrinkable, toilets can’t flush and showers are off the table—then you probably start to feel like your job is equivalent to 13 jobs.
In Buncombe County, where many people are still displaced after Hurricane Helene flooded the region’s main city, Asheville, and surrounding towns, volunteer nurses and other healthcare workers were ready to take on this multilayered challenge. Yet the storm’s high winds and record-setting downpour raised water levels to the highest on record in western North Carolina, creating unforeseen challenges that made it almost impossible to provide services. That’s why International Medical Corps sent staff and volunteers to provide lifesaving medical care, mental health care and services in water, sanitation and hygiene to address urgent community needs.
In North Carolina, we have delivered behavioral health services to 120 people and medical services to 1,110 people at three shelters and one mobile medical unit, as well as supplies to 20 health centers serving more than 420,000 people across the region.
For her passionate work to save Black mothers’ lives, she is recognized as North Carolina’s USA Today Woman of the Year. This honor highlights her leadership in tackling racial disparities head-on.
Subscribe to the newsletterso that you never miss an uplifting story of medical humanitarians improving lives worldwide.
About Angels in Medicine
Angels in Medicine is a volunteer site dedicated to the humanitarians, heroes, angels, and bodhisattvas of medicine. The site features physicians, nurses, physician assistants and other healthcare workers and volunteers who reach people without the resources or opportunities for quality care, such as teens, the poor, the incarcerated, the elderly, or those living in poor or war-torn regions. Read their stories at www.medangel.org.
Interested in writing for Angels in Medicine? Know about an Angel we should interview? Drop me a note at harry@medangel.org.