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Thursday, May 8, 2025

Haiti health system nears collapse as medicine dwindles

by

380 days ago
20240423
A youth washes clothes at a public school that serves as a shelter for people displaced from their homes due to clashes between armed gangs in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, April 22, 2024. Haiti's health system has long been fragile, but it's now nearing total collapse after gangs launched coordinated attacks on Feb. 29, targeting critical state infrastructure in the capital and beyond. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

A youth washes clothes at a public school that serves as a shelter for people displaced from their homes due to clashes between armed gangs in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, April 22, 2024. Haiti's health system has long been fragile, but it's now nearing total collapse after gangs launched coordinated attacks on Feb. 29, targeting critical state infrastructure in the capital and beyond. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

On a re­cent morn­ing at a hos­pi­tal in the heart of gang ter­ri­to­ry in Haiti’s cap­i­tal, a woman be­gan con­vuls­ing be­fore her body went limp as a doc­tor and two nurs­es raced to save her.

They stuck elec­trodes to her chest and flipped on an oxy­gen ma­chine while keep­ing their eyes on a com­put­er screen that re­flect­ed a dan­ger­ous­ly low oxy­gen lev­el of 84%.

No one knew what was wrong with her.

Even more wor­ri­some, the Doc­tors With­out Bor­ders hos­pi­tal in the Cite Soleil slum was run­ning low on key med­i­cine to treat con­vul­sions.

“The med­ica­tion she re­al­ly needs, we bare­ly have,” said Dr. Rachel Lav­i­gne, a physi­cian with the med­ical aid group.

It’s a fa­mil­iar scene re­peat­ed dai­ly at hos­pi­tals and clin­ics across Port-au-Prince, where life-sav­ing med­ica­tion and equip­ment are dwin­dling or al­to­geth­er ab­sent as bru­tal gangs tight­en their grip on the cap­i­tal and be­yond. They have blocked roads, forced the clo­sure of the main in­ter­na­tion­al air­port in ear­ly March and par­a­lyzed op­er­a­tions at the coun­try’s largest sea­port, where con­tain­ers filled with key sup­plies re­main stuck.

“Every­thing is crash­ing,” Lav­i­gne said.

Haiti’s health sys­tem has long been frag­ile, but it’s now near­ing to­tal col­lapse af­ter gangs launched co­or­di­nat­ed at­tacks on Feb. 29, tar­get­ing crit­i­cal in­fra­struc­ture in the cap­i­tal and be­yond.

The vi­o­lence has forced sev­er­al med­ical in­sti­tu­tions and dial­y­sis cen­tres to close, in­clud­ing Haiti’s largest pub­lic hos­pi­tal. Lo­cat­ed in down­town Port-au-Prince, the Hos­pi­tal of the State Uni­ver­si­ty of Haiti was sup­posed to re­open on April 1 af­ter clos­ing when the at­tack be­gan, but gangs have in­fil­trat­ed it.

One of the few in­sti­tu­tions still op­er­at­ing is Peace Uni­ver­si­ty Hos­pi­tal, lo­cat­ed south of the shut­tered air­port. From Feb. 29 to April 15, the hos­pi­tal treat­ed some 200 pa­tients with gun­shot wounds, and its beds re­main full.

“We ur­gent­ly need fu­el be­cause we op­er­ate us­ing gen­er­a­tors. Oth­er­wise, we run the risk of clos­ing our doors,” hos­pi­tal di­rec­tor Dr. Paul Ju­nior Fontilus said in a state­ment.

More than 2,500 peo­ple were killed or wound­ed across Haiti from Jan­u­ary to March, a more than 50% in­crease com­pared with the same pe­ri­od last year, ac­cord­ing to a re­cent U.N. re­port.

Even if a hos­pi­tal is open, some­times there is lit­tle or no med­ical staff be­cause gang vi­o­lence erupts dai­ly in Port-au-Prince, forc­ing doc­tors and nurs­es to stay at home or turn around if they en­counter blocked roads manned by heav­i­ly armed men.

The spi­ralling chaos has left a grow­ing num­ber of pa­tients with can­cer, AIDS and oth­er se­ri­ous ill­ness­es with lit­tle to no re­course, with gangs al­so loot­ing and set­ting fire to phar­ma­cies in the cap­i­tal’s down­town area.

Doc­tors With­out Bor­ders it­self has run out of many med­ica­tions used to treat di­a­betes and high blood pres­sure, and asth­ma in­halers that help pre­vent dead­ly at­tacks are nowhere to be found in the cap­i­tal, Lav­i­gne said.

At the Doc­tors With­out Bor­ders hos­pi­tal, med­ical staff re­cent­ly tried to save a boy with a se­vere asth­ma at­tack by giv­ing him oxy­gen, she said. That didn’t work, and nei­ther did an­oth­er type of med­ica­tion. Fi­nal­ly, they end­ed up in­ject­ing him with adren­a­line, which is used in emer­gen­cies to treat ana­phy­lac­tic shock.

“We im­pro­vise and we do our best for the peo­ple here,” Lav­i­gne said.

Peo­ple’s health is wors­en­ing be­cause the dai­ly med­ica­tion they need for their chron­ic con­di­tions is not avail­able, warned Doc­tors With­out Bor­ders project co­or­di­na­tor Ja­cob Burns.

“It be­comes acute and then they run out of op­tions,” he said. “For cer­tain peo­ple, there are very, very few op­tions right now.”

De­spite the press­ing need for med­ical care, the Doc­tors With­out Bor­ders hos­pi­tal in Cite Soleil has been forced to cut the num­ber of out­pa­tients it treats dai­ly from 150 to 50, Burns said, though all emer­gen­cies are at­tend­ed to.

Scores of peo­ple line up out­side the hos­pi­tal each day and risk be­ing shot by gang mem­bers who con­trol the area as they await med­ical care.

Every­one is al­lowed to en­ter the hos­pi­tal com­pound, but med­ical staff set up a triage to de­ter­mine which 50 peo­ple will be seen. Those with less ur­gent needs are asked to re­turn an­oth­er day, Burns said.

On Fri­day morn­ing, 51-year-old Jean Marc Bap­tiste shuf­fled in­to the emer­gency room with a bloody ban­dage on his right hand. He said po­lice in an ar­moured ve­hi­cle shot him the pre­vi­ous day as he was col­lect­ing wood to sell as kin­dling in an area con­trolled by gangs.

Once in­side, nurs­es re­moved the ban­dage to re­veal a gap­ing wound in his thumb as he cried out in pain. Lav­i­gne told him he need­ed a plas­tic sur­geon, which the hos­pi­tal does not have, and or­dered X-rays to en­sure there was no frac­ture.

On av­er­age, the Cite Soleil hos­pi­tal sees three wound­ed peo­ple a day, but some­times it’s up to 14 now, staff said.

Re­cent­ly, five peo­ple wound­ed by bul­lets ar­rived at the hos­pi­tal af­ter spend­ing all night in­side a pub­lic bus that couldn’t move be­cause of heavy gun­fire, Burns said.

“Cite Soleil was long the epi­cen­tre of vi­o­lence,” he said. “And now vi­o­lence is so wide­spread that it’s be­come a prob­lem for every­one.”

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) —

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