Sunday, June 28, 2026
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Home OpinionsThe human cost of continuity of care: the invisible pressure on healthcare professionals in Haiti

The human cost of continuity of care: the invisible pressure on healthcare professionals in Haiti

by Mackenson JOB
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Health systems rely far beyond buildings, equipment, or funding.

Health systems rely far beyond buildings, equipment, or funding. They depend above all on women and men capable of making precise clinical decisions, intervening quickly, and maintaining quality care despite extremely difficult working conditions.

In Haiti, this capacity is today under continuous and multidimensional pressure. Health professionals operate in an environment marked by insecurity, massive population movements, repeated service interruptions, supply difficulties, overload of the still functional facilities, and an instability that constantly redefines working conditions. These constraints do not disappear at the end of a day. They accumulate, become entrenched over time, and eventually deeply affect the teams.Fatigue becomes persistent. Constant vigilance is exhausting. Sleep deteriorates. Recovery times become insufficient, and decisions sometimes have to be made in a climate of uncertainty and tension that has become almost structural in the daily life of healthcare institutions.

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