As Venezuela's Socialist Meltdown Crushes Economy, Heartbreaking Medical Tragedies Unfold
Venezuela's socialist economy has shattered the nation's health care system and the situation in the nation's hospitals is heartbreaking.
At San Cristobal hospital in Tachira State, only emergency cases are being admitted, and people have to buy their own medicines, bandages, and gloves.
Some patients are forced to wait in stairwells for treatment that is not coming. One patient, Gloria, needs a metal pin for her leg but could wait up to three months.
Because of a shortage of nurses, many patients in the hospital are being cared for by their relatives.
Many doctors and nurses have left the hospital because they were unable to survive on the minimum wage they were getting, and those left are working for almost nothing.
Margaret Gamboa, a student doctor, says, "Everything here is so sad. I cannot help them, because they need help, there is nobody here."
The hospital has been left almost bankrupt by the worsening economic situation in Venezuela, and parts have had to be boarded up due to the lack of supplies.
One 7-year-old girl lies on a bed, suffering from a brain tumor. There is no cancer treatment available in the country, and she is being cared for in her hospital bed by her mother Emyuri Fuentes, who says, tearfully, "Because she's my daughter I have to support her and do everything I can to help her. We've been here for two months."
One boy needs antibiotics for a serious bowel problem, but they simply aren't available. His father describes the situation as "a nightmare."