Operational Update: Supporting First Responders In Puerto Rico, Medical Aid to Ukraine and More

A paramedic with Puerto Rico’s First Response Emergency Medical Services, or FREMS, treats a patient in San Juan, Puerto Rico. FREMS is a group of first responders donating their time (and often their resources), to help those involved in car accidents, traumatic injuries, fires, floods, and other emergencies. To expand their emergency response capacity in Puerto Rico, Direct Relief, as part of AbbVie’s $50 million donation, awarded a $350,000 grant to FREMS to purchase a new rescue unit and medical equipment such as complex cardiac monitors. (Photo by Alejandro Granadillo for Direct Relief)

Over the past seven days, Direct Relief delivered 511 shipments of requested medical aid to 44 U.S. states and territories and 11 countries worldwide, including Ukraine.

The shipments contained 16.6 million defined daily doses of medication, including N-95 masks, mental health medications, antibiotics, chronic disease medications, nutritional products, insulin, and cancer treatments.

Ukraine Response to Date

Since February 24, Direct Relief has provided medical aid weighing more than 400 tons in weight, with more on the way.

Direct Relief has been responding directly to specific medical requests from Ukraine’s Ministry of Health, as well as NGOs and local organizations supporting health care in Ukraine. From acute trauma care supplies like tourniquets and blood clotting agents to chronic disease management medications, including insulin, to specialty therapies for cancers, Direct Relief has provided a host of medical materiel for care during the conflict.

IV fluids, donated by Baxter International, arrived in Kharkiv, Ukraine, this week to support medical care in northeastern Ukraine. The shipment was deployed from the company’s facilities in Europe and is the first of several donations, including large shipments en route to support patients managing kidney conditions in Ukraine.

This week, TAPS-Ukraine in Dnipro received an emergency field hospital, donated by the State of California Office of Emergency Services and transported by Direct Relief. The hospital kit, which contains 50 beds, trauma care and oxygen supplies and more, has since been deployed to frontline areas of the conflict needing medical support.

In the News

WORLDWIDE

This week, outside the U.S., Direct Relief shipped more than 14.9 million defined daily doses of medication.

Countries that received medical aid over the past week included:

  • Ukraine
  • Pakistan
  • North Macedonia
  • Sierra Leone
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Sudan
  • Haiti
  • India
  • Peru
  • Botswana

UNITED STATES

Direct Relief delivered 487 shipments containing 1.7 million doses of medications over the past week to organizations, including the following:

  • WelVista, South Carolina
  • NC MedAssist, North Carolina
  • St. Vincent de Paul Pharmacy, Texas
  • CCI Greenway, Maryland
  • Community Health, Illinois
  • Central MS Health Service, Mississippi
  • UNC Healthcare, North Carolina
  • Free Clinic of Meridian, Mississippi
  • The Health Hut, Louisiana
  • Agape Clinic, Texas

Bolstering Puerto Rico’s Emergency Services

FREMS volunteers carry equipment to a vehicle. (Photo by Alejandro Granadillo for Direct Relief)


Puerto Rico’s First Response Emergency Medical Services, or FREMS, is a group of first responders donating their time (and often their resources) to help those involved in car accidents, traumatic injuries, fires, floods, and other emergencies.

To expand their emergency response capacity in Puerto Rico, Direct Relief, as part of AbbVie’s $50 million donation, awarded a $350,000 grant to FREMS to purchase a new rescue unit and medical equipment such as complex cardiac monitors. The full story can be found here.

YEAR TO DATE

Since January 1, 2022, Direct Relief has delivered 7,298 shipments to 1,491 healthcare organizations in 51 U.S. states and territories and 75 countries.

These shipments contained 221.4 million defined daily doses of medication valued at $795.8 million (wholesale) and weighing 8 million lbs.

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