A man leans down with a stethoscope to listen to a child's lungs or heart.
Vijay Srinivasa, a pediatrician from Cincinnati, Ohio, treats a child in eastern North Carolina after Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC)

By Taylor Knopf

Hurricanes typically hit poorer, more vulnerable populations the hardest.

So a week after Florence, a medical mission team based out of Toledo, Ohio traveled to eastern North Carolina specifically to serve migrant farmworker communities.

Hurricanes or natural disasters tend to worsen existing health care and housing issues for farmworkers, said Justin Flores, vice president of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), a multi-state agricultural worker organization.

A make shift tent with tables underneath is held down by a car to the left of the picture as people walk around underneath.
Dr. Richard Paat, who heads the medical missions out of the University of Toledo, walks through the makeshift relief clinic set up outside a latino business in eastern North Carolina to serve migrant farm workers after Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC)

FLOC is also based in Toledo, Ohio, but has a strong presence in North Carolina. Flores spends his time in Charlotte and in Dudley, where the group’s North Carolina headquarters are located.

Farmworkers often dwell in housing units supplied by growers, Flores noted, and he said many depend on their employers for rides anywhere.

“Your employer has a lot of say over when and where you get health care,” he said. “So those issues already exist and a hurricane just adds to that.”

Access to care also varies county to county in North Carolina, and he said some farmworkers are able to physically get to low-cost health clinics. But after transportation difficulties, low wages also makes it difficult to pay for, and receive, care.

A medical student wearing blue scrubs listens to a patient's heart.
Ferdinand Jose Melendez Padilla, a fourth year medical student from Puerto Rico, joined the medical mission team that served migrant farm workers in eastern North Carolina after Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC)

There are a lot of workplace injuries and illnesses, Flores noted, such as green tobacco sickness, exposure to pesticides, stress, falls and snake bites.

Major hurricanes such as Florence wipe out a lot of the crop fields, and for farmworkers, it can result in a loss of work, wages and sometimes housing. Flores said some workers will be without work for a week or two after the storm.

The 83rd mission

Richard Paat, clinical professor of medicine at the University of Toledo College of Medicine, runs the school’s global medical mission team.

When Paat heard from Toledo-based FLOC staff about the migrant farmworkers in Florence’s path, he gathered a medical mission team – the 83rd group to go out to deliver care. Some missions are scheduled annually to places such as Honduras and Guatemala, others occur in the aftermath of natural disasters such as Puerto Rico after Maria and Texas after Harvey.

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Each team member pays for their own transportation, and Paat takes care of the supplies. After dozens of missions, he’s developed a standard packing list.

The goal of the medical missions team is to target marginalized populations. They bring information in Spanish and English. Many team members are bilingual.

“We all drop what we have to do, take vacation time, reschedule patients and head down,” he said.

Medical missions team works lay out supplies on blue tarps in the grass outside a makeshift clinic.
The medical missions team from Toledo brought 13 duffel bags, each with 50 pounds of medical supplies each to treat migrant farm workers outside make shift clinics after Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC).

Thirteen duffel bags, each filled with 50 pounds of medical supplies and medications Paat brought to North Carolina were purchased with donations made by the Special Commission on Relief and Education (SCORE) of the Filipino Association of Toledo.

Due to the state of emergency declaration, members of his team obtained temporary medical licenses to practice in North Carolina.

Paat and a team of 17 doctors from Toledo, Utah, Virginia, Alabama and Wisconsin landed in Raleigh on Friday, Sept. 21, a week after Hurricane Florence made landfall. Most team members were veterans of prior disaster relief missions.

New additions were three medical students from Puerto Rico who wanted to give back after experiencing Hurricane Maria. Paat said a doctor from Duke University, as well as six members of the Philippine Nursing Association of North Carolina joined the team.

FLOC took care of the group’s logistical needs, they slept on air mattresses in its office building in Dudley. Paat said about 40 migrant farmworker families had evacuated to the FLOC building in Wayne County during the storm and they cooked for the medical missions team.

Stark reality

Over the course of three days, the team saw about 300 patients. The first day they set up at the FLOC building, the second day outside La Tropicana Mexican market in Clinton, and the third they split into mini teams and visited farmworker camps.

A young women in blue scrubs listens to a child's back using a stethoscope under a makeshift outdoor medical clinic.
Mariah Truscinski, a fourth year medical student from the University of Toledo, treats children of migrant farm workers in eastern North Carolina during a medical mission following Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC).

Paat said he often sees upper respiratory infections and skin issues following a hurricane, as well as anxiety and depression. And with the migrant workers, Paat said he saw green tobacco sickness for the first time.

They informed people about the clinics through FLOC and put up flyers in local Latino businesses. All clinic visits and medications are free to patients. Paat said he tries to remove all barriers to care during these relief missions.

When visiting the migrant worker housing on the last day, Paat said he was hit by a “stark reality.”

They drove past the growers’ residences first, which Paat said are always very nice. Then they passed the stables, which he said are well-kept. Up next  are the farmworker housing units.

“Then you realize the horses have better homes than the migrant workers,” Paat said.

The migrant farmworkers also have complex mental health needs. Paat said his team encountered high rates of depression and anxiety stemming from fear of being deported, legal issues with their employers, poor living conditions, and family separation.

A young man wearing scrubs and facing the camera talks to two women at a hurricane relief clinic in eastern North Carolina
Martin Roldan Auffant, a third year medical student from Puerto Rico, helps the migrant farm worker community after Hurricane Florence. Photo credit: Courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC).

Others talked about the loss of crops, jobs and wages resulting from Florence.

“I heard the tobacco was mainly gone. They were hoping the sweet potato crop would come in,” Paat said. “And a lot were looking to work in the Christmas tree industry coming up.”

He said many use alcohol as a way to treat their depression.

Treating mental health issues for this population is difficult, Paat said. In some cases, his team could prescribe a three-month supply of antidepressants or anxiety medication. Permanent North Carolina residents have the option to see a local provider.

But for a number who are seasonal employees, often moving from place to place, it can be more difficult to obtain and maintain treatment.

Before and after

As for pre-storm warnings, FLOC worked to get the word out about shelters and resources through emails, text chains and Facebook posts to the 10,000 farmworkers the organization represents.

Flores said he got the sense that Spanish language messaging and advisories ahead of Hurricane Florence were better than for Matthew in 2016, which he attributes to the projected magnitude of the storm.

NC Board of Nursing licenses more than !57,000 nurses each year.

Employers are responsible for evacuating farmworkers if necessary. And Flores said FLOC put the word out to members to report those bosses who didn’t help with evacuation.

Overall, with the exception of maybe one or two, Flores said employers did a good job of doing what they were supposed to do.

FLOC had volunteers at the clinics to help people who wanted to apply for FEMA assistance.

But people who may qualify for assistance through a U.S. citizen child sometimes are hesitant to do so. The applications require lots of information and for migrant workers who are undocumented, it can be intimidating, he said.

a woman and man stand side by side wearing matching FLOC T-shirts at an outside of tents containing a medical clinic
Jackkie Castillo, a farmworker and FLOC organizer with Justin Flores, vice president of FLOC help out at a medical mission clinic for migrant farm workers in eastern North Carolina after Florence. photo credit: courtesy of Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC)

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Taylor Knopf writes about mental health, including addiction and harm reduction. She lives in Raleigh and previously wrote for The News & Observer. Knopf has a bachelor's degree in sociology with a minor in journalism.