U.S. to resume medevac flights from Haiti

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – The U.S. military will  resume evacuation flights to the United States for critically  injured Haitian earthquake victims within the next 12 hours,  the White House said yesterday.

“Having received assurances that additional capacity exists  both here and among our international partners, we determined  that we can resume these critical flights,” White House  spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement.
“The flights are on track to resume in the next 12 hours,”  Vietor said.

The U.S. military medevac flights have been halted since  Wednesday over a dispute about where the patients would be  treated and the costs of their care.

Hundreds of patients had already been evacuated to the  United States for treatment, most to Florida hospitals, since  the devastating Jan. 12 quake in the poor Caribbean country.  But Florida’s governor had asked the federal government to  share the burden.

Suspension of the U.S. military medevac flights has  increased pressure on emergency medical teams in Haiti who are  working around the clock to treat seriously injured quake  survivors, either in damaged local hospitals or in fully  equipped emergency clinics that have been flown in.

The White House statement said patients were being  identified for transfer, doctors were making sure it was safe  for them to fly and that pediatric care was being prepared  aboard the aircraft where needed.
The state of Florida was identifying hospitals to receive  the patients, Vietor added.