Hurricane Matthew, a Category 4 storm, struck the central Caribbean on October 4-6, 2016. In advance of the storm’s arrival, USAID activated a regional Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) on October 3. The DART – which at its height comprised of more than 70 people—led the U.S. humanitarian response efforts in coordination with affected governments. The majority of the U.S. response was focused on Haiti, which sustained the most damage from hurricane.
U.S. Humanitarian Assistance
Over $82 Million provided to Haiti, The Bahamas, and Jamaica. In Haiti we provided:
- 49,400 Blankets
- 23,200 Kitchen Sets
- 28,100 Hygiene Kits
- 9,900 Rolls of Plastic Sheeting
Health and Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene
To prevent the spread of cholera and strengthen health services, USAID supported cholera treatment facilities and mobile health clinics in affected areas. USAID also promoted safe hygiene practices and provided water, sanitation, and other critical supplies including:
- 1.5† Million servings of oral rehydration salts †to help relieve the effects of cholera and other diarrheal diseases
- 5.7 Million water purification tablets to help provide safe water for 190,000 people
- 38* Metric Tons of Calcium Hypochlorite (HTH) *to chlorinate piped water systems for three months
Impact
1.4* Million People in need of humanitarian assistance *175,000 people displaced 60% of roads damaged in SW peninsula
U.S. Military Assistance
275 Metric Tons of relief supplies delivered
98 Missions to deliver relief supplies and response personnel
Food Assistance
14,900 Metric Tons of locally-procured and imported assistance
126 Metric Tons of ready-to-use supplementary food *enough to to treat 31,502 children suffering from moderate acute malnutrition
All numbers as of January 4, 2017 Sources: OCHA and Government of Haiti
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