let's speak to amy potter, a nurse. she has just returned recently.nk you for being on the program. what did you witness while you are there? >> one of the worst humanitarian situations you can imagine. i saw the equivalent of 1.8 million people crammed into a space that formerly held just a few hundred thousand. people desperate for anywhere to stay. every building had been converted to a shelter. i remember going to one wedding hall that held 30 plus families. outside of that, there are tens as far as you can see. when i say tents, that is charitable. generally just wooden boards nailed together, covered loose in plastic. no match for the wind and rain we are facing. there are not enough ains, water, not enough food, not enough supplies. the roads are crowded. you would see cars go by with people sitting two or three deep holding onto the doors in an attempt just to keep them closed . all of their possessions on top. a lot of times it was just a donkey carts with the same thing. i couldn't even imagine it until i saw it firsthand. it is truly a huma