BFF-01 In crisis-hit Venezuela, maternity wards have become death traps

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In crisis-hit Venezuela, maternity wards have become death traps

CARACAS, Jan 29, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Red roses and a burning candle frame the
small white casket Wendy Dulcey is caressing at a hospital morgue in Caracas.

It contains the remains of her baby son who died on December 1, 39 days
after he was born — a cruel fate befalling far too many in the crisis-hit
South American country.

With seven years of back-to-back recession and the highest inflation in the
world, Venezuela’s hospitals are creaking skeletons of their former selves,
with a critical shortage of doctors and nursing personnel, surgical equipment
and medicine.

According to the latest official figures available, infant mortality in
Venezuela increased almost a third in 2016 from the previous year, to 11,466
deaths among children aged zero to one.

Maternal mortality in the country of some 30 million people soared by 65
percent in the same period — a tragedy that began building long before the
coronavirus pandemic.

Dulcey nurses her still-prominent baby bump and says she has no more tears
to cry.

She recounts in horrifying detail the days leading up to the death of her
son, Thiago, whose body she later spotted in a partly-open fridge among the
corpses of other dead children.

The 39-year-old fell ill and was admitted to a hospital in the Venezuelan
capital for an emergency C-section at only seven months.

She was shown away by two other maternity hospitals before she was admitted
to a clinic she described as having dirty, poorly-lit corridors “full of
excrement, blood, garbage.”

The lifts did not work, and there were no wheelchairs.

From the moment she arrived, “the only thing I could think about was that
we weren’t going to make it out of there,” she told AFP.

Things soon went from bad to worse.

After little Thiago was born prematurely, Dulcey said staff took a used
syringe to insert a feeding tube, which she claimed was never replaced.

– Too small to fight –

Thiago died just weeks later of a bacterial infection, and his distraught
mother claims criminal negligence.

“He could not fight on his own,” she said.

Dulcey said she almost didn’t make it either, having developed uterine
bleeding after the birth.

Doctor Jaime Lorenzo of the NGO Doctors United said such experiences were
common.

With hospitals short on supplies, patients are often asked to bring their
own bedding, gowns, food, basic items such as gauze and bandages, even drugs.

A 2019 survey by HumVenezuela, an NGO documenting the country’s
humanitarian crisis, found four in ten hospitals had a shortage of basic
supplies, and eight out of 10 did not have enough surgical tools or medicine.

The obstetrics wards of half the country’s maternity hospitals were
partially or fully out of service in 2019, it said.

Thousands of trained doctors and nurses are among the five million
Venezuelans estimated to have left the country in recent years in search of a
better life elsewhere.

Someone like Dulcey, a public official with an inflation-battered income of
less than $1 a month could never even think of giving birth in a private
clinic, where better conditions come with a hefty price tag of about $6,000
per delivery.

– ‘A matter of luck’ –

Nineteen-year-old Briggite Perez said she went through a similar ordeal,
having been shown away from five hospitals before being admitted to the one
where she finally gave birth on December 26.

After trying to deliver naturally on a rusty bed with no footrest, she was
wheeled into the operating room for a cesarian.

Four days after she was discharged — with her baby — an infection
required Perez to be hospitalized again.

HumVenezuela’s 2019 survey found that more than half of women received
inadequate obstetric care at Venezuelan public maternity centers.

Vanessa Martinez, 28, had an emergency C-section in her seventh month of
pregnancy after an iron supplement prescribed to her caused a surge in blood
pressure.

For her, giving birth safely in Venezuela “is a matter of luck”.

And considering herself one of the lucky ones, she dreams of nothing more
than a “quiet life” with her newborn daughter Samantha, she told AFP at her
home in a slum west of Caracas.

According to the World Health Organization, globally about 7,000 newborns
die every day, mainly in poor countries, as well as 830 women from
“preventable causes due to pregnancy and childbirth”.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0855 hrs