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"She was really suffering," Surena said. "The most difficult thing emotionally is that you know how to do it, but you don't have the materials do it." The patients say they know Surena is doing his best. Florene Francois, 19, was trying to soothe her fussing 18-month-old son, Rick Joey, on blankets in a corner of the patio between Surena's grill and a built-in bar. She said she is fine despite the scrapes on her face, but she worries about a deep gash on the back of her son's head. "They just don't have what they need for the stitches," she said. A 39-year-old tailor, Roger Hubert, had bandages on wounds and a sling for a severely broken arm. His bones have not been reset because there is no X-ray machine available. "Considering the materials here, they are taking good care of us," Hubert said. The supplies of food, water and medicine were quickly running out. Surena drove himself to the airport Thursday after neighbors cleared away debris blocking the only road down the hill, but his hopes of finding help were dashed in the confusion of so many arriving aid flights. "So many planes. You don't know where to go and who to talk to," he said. Still, he is optimistic more help is coming. He said Rotary International has pledged to send supplies, including shelter boxes for the patients, and he expects more doctors to come, too. Meanwhile, he keeps everyone at his house because they have nowhere else to go. He sent three patients in urgent need of surgery to a hospital on the airport road Thursday, but he took them back in after they were refused admission. "They would have left their bodies on the street," Surena said.
[Associated
Press;
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