“I am in touch with the medical community in Warsaw, Doctors of Hope. My plan is to bring medications but, most importantly, money to help with the purchase of immediate medical supplies and deliver help to most needed in the war region,” the family physician wrote in her own e-mail appeal.
“We are facing humanitarian crisis of unprecedented proportions and Canadians are very generous with help.”
Now they would like to maximize their efforts and appeal to the broader local community that has proven, time and again, that they come through for those in need.
With input from their friends in Poland, they are assessing the needs of the children, the elderly, the expectant mothers whose husbands had to report for combat.
“Essentially we work with the medical community there, right on the spot, and assess the situation on a daily basis,” she said, adding that there seems to be a focus on pediatric needs and first-aid kits.
Dr. Marszal will work in Poland until the beginning of April. The fundraising will continue, however, as Kay will be making her own trip in May.
Kay describes it as grass-roots work of the kind she and Dr. Marszal have done before. Seeing the need in Polish refugee camps, she said, “we can't just sit back and not do anything.”
The news brings this home to them every day with stories of people afraid to leave their homes, elderly Ukrainians who can't be moved, even the efforts made to evacuate and save animals in the zoos.