dr. lassegue. many of his staff died; others are scattered, attending to injured and dead family members in the ruins of their homes. he's providing care for a patient population that is also largely homeless, and he can hardly send amputees to live on the sidewalk in front of the ruins of their home. >> the government is on the way to set up some tent village where we could have discharge person. >> suarez: frightened patients, a doctor shortage when the volunteers go home, nowhere to send the recovering-- it's monumental, really. but this building is a constant reminder to all at the hospital of what the country's lost. up to 150 second-year nursing students at this, haiti's only public teaching hospital, were killed when the building where they trained collapsed. the recovery has only begun, and the smell of human remains stings the air. but haiti's medical challenges, and partners in health's role in the response, range far from port-au-prince. thousands of injured headed out of the capital to