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Hurricane Helene and Milton Response

par International Medical Corps

It has been more than a month since back-to-back major Hurricanes Helene and Milton both made landfall in Florida, leaving at least 255 dead and lasting devastation in communities across Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee. The
Category 4 and Category 3 hurricanes destroyed critical infrastructure including major roads, homes and buildings, and severely incapacitated the power grid and water and sewage systems.

To date, Hurricane Helene has broken records of rainfall, flooding, location and storm strength and size across the affected states. The storm is the third major hurricane to hit Florida’s Big Bend region in the past 13 months and the fourth hurricane to hit the Gulf Coast this year. Helene is the strongest storm in recorded history to make landfall at the Big Bend and early assessments report that the damage caused in Florida by Helene is more than 2024’s Hurricane Debby and 2023’s Hurricane Idalia combined. Less than two weeks later, Hurricane Milton followed Helene's path toward Florida. Milton made landfall on Wednesday, October 9th, as a Category 3 hurricane hundreds of miles wide, affecting many of the same communities hit by Hurricane Helene.

The storms left thousands of individuals and families unhoused and without access to power, potable water, food or medical care. Entire communities in affected areas—
remain under a boil-water advisory due to damaged or contaminated water systems. In Buncombe County, home to the city of Asheville—access to potable water is not expected to return until 2025. As communities return to their normal operations, students return to school and businesses reopen, residents remain exceedingly vulnerable to numerous challenges, including an increased risk of communicable disease, contaminated mud, non-operational sanitation systems, reduced access to potable water, worsening of existing health conditions, disrupted and decreased access to healthcare, lost wages and shelter, and increased mental stress.

International Medical Corps has implemented a multi-state response to
both Hurricanes Helene and Milton across four affected states—Florida,
Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee—since September 26. We
have partnered with state and local governments, health center organizations and networks, and other local actors to provide direct health services, water and sanitation supplies, and medical and non-medical equipment to affected communities.

In response to Hurricane Milton, International Medical Corps is coordinating closely with the Florida Association of Community Health Centers (FACHC), existing health facility partners, and county- and state-run distribution centers to identify and disseminate urgently needed emergency supplies, equipment and other items. For example,
one large federally qualified health center (FQHC) network south of Tampa was heavily impacted by Hurricane Milton, with four health centers—including a specialized care clinic for individuals with chronic illnesses—taken offline due to severe damages.

In response to Hurricane Helene across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee, International Medical Corps has responded by distributing urgent medical and non-medical items and by providing direct medical services. Over the course of the response, we have facilitated the shipment and distribution of 10,144 hygiene kits, 1,512 wound-care kits, and 20,441 hygiene and emergency items to 82 sites—including health facilities, community centers and recovery centers—across the region. International Medical Corps has also delivered 14 1,000-gallon water tanks, 6,000 gallons of potable water and 20 portable toilets to various health facilities, to ensure the restoration and continuation of operations and services.

Since 2005, International Medical Corps has responded to US and Caribbean emergencies, starting with Hurricane Katrina. We partner with national, state, and local healthcare systems to address challenges and deploy emergency teams in disasters. Our response efforts include the 2010 Haiti earthquake, 2012's Superstorm Sandy, 2017's Hurricane Maria, 2018's Hurricane Michael and more. In the past seven years, we've supported over 6 million patients across 18 states and territories through partnerships with more than 275 hospitals, clinics, and health facilities.

Help respond to Hurricane Helene and Milton's devastation. Your donation will support lifesaving efforts and provide medical care, supplies, and relief to affected communities.

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Your Support can Save Lives!

By supporting this project or creating a giving opportunity of your own, you can make a lifesaving difference for families affected by crises in the US and worldwide.

With the support of our global community, in 2023, we:

• reached nearly 16.5 million people affected by armed conflict, natural disasters and disease outbreaks;
• delivered 9,331,598 primary healthcare consultations;
• trained 107,202 people on health, mental health, protection and nutrition-related topics; and
• assisted 2,375,098 people with vital nutrition support.

Join International Medical Corps in our mission to build a healthier and more hopeful world for all in 2024.

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*Please Note for recurring donations: Once we have determined that the community can continue to respond to the after-effects of this emergency without us, we will scale back our response efforts. At that time, we will redirect your future donations where they are needed most to help us respond to future outbreaks of conflict, disease or disaster.

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