Saturday, July 16, 2011

Chavez Chooses Cuba for Chemotherapy

Chavez Chooses Cuba for Chemotherapy
By Charlie Devereux - Jul 16, 2011 6:30 AM GMT+0200

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he'll fly to Cuba today for a
second stage of treatment involving chemotherapy as he fights cancer in
what he has called the "battle of my life."

"I need to continue completing the strict plan designed by the medical
team that is accompanying me on this ascent of the mountain," Chavez
said yesterday in comments carried on state television. "I'm asking for
legislative authority to absent myself from the country from Saturday,
July 16, in order to continue the treatment plan in Havana needed for me
to recover my full health."

Chavez, who has led South America's largest oil producer since 1999, was
operated on June 20 for an undisclosed form of malignant cancer after an
initial operation to remove a pelvic abscess on June 11. The
self-declared socialist said July 13 that doctors removed a
baseball-sized tumor from his pelvic area. In his comments yesterday, he
didn't disclose how long he would remain out of Venezuela and whether he
would cede power to Vice President Elias Jaua.

"I'm going to begin the second stage of this slow and complex process of
recuperation," the 56-year-old leader said. "The second stage will start
with chemotherapy that has already been planned in scientific detail."

Venezuela'a National Assembly will vote today on whether to grant Chavez
permission to travel to Cuba for treatment, according to a statement on
its website. Chavez holds a majority in Congress.
'State Secret'

The president's announcement quashes reports that he would go to Brazil
for treatment after an offer by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, who
herself was treated for a lymphoma in 2009 at a hospital in Sao Paulo.

Cuba was chosen over Brazil because it will be easier for Chavez to keep
his exact prognosis a secret, said Jose Vicente Carrasquero, a political
analyst at the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas.

"In Brazil, it would be very difficult to keep people in the dark about
what's going on because public opinion would demand answers and the
Brazilian media would investigate," Carrasquero said in a phone
interview. "In Cuba, the president's health will be handled like a state
secret."
Opposition, Transition

Chavez and his government have repeatedly denied opposition demands that
he hand over power temporarily to Jaua while he undergoes treatment. The
opposition's push for a political transition on the premise that he's
"finished" due to cancer will fail, the president said July 14.

"The opposition is pushing for a transition and saying that Chavez is
finished, that he's chopped up into 20 pieces," Chavez said. "The only
transition here is from capitalism to socialism."

The Venezuelan constitution is vague about the legality of a president
absenting himself from duties while he seeks medical treatment abroad,
said Carrasquero. Chavez is unlikely to cede power unless his health
deteriorates significantly, he said.

"The president has never left a delegate behind and he's not going to do
it now," Carrasquero said. "He considers it a weakness to leave someone
in charge."

Patients are treated with chemotherapy or radiation even after a tumor
is successfully removed to prevent the cancer from recurring, said
Jeffrey Meyerhardt, a gastrointestinal oncologist at the Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute in Boston.
Challenges

While radiation is sometimes easier to tolerate than chemotherapy when
targeted to specific areas of the body, both cause fatigue and nausea.
Even so, many patients in high profile jobs are able to work full time
through treatment sessions that can last several weeks, Meyerhardt said.

Chavez's health problems have overshadowed the economic challenges he
faces to secure re-election, which include the highest inflation rate in
the hemisphere, food shortages, violent crime and a housing shortage of
more than 2 million units.

The yield on Venezuela's 9.25 percent benchmark bond due in 2027 has
fallen 82 basis points, or 0.82 percentage points, to 12.98 percent
since June 13, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The price has
risen 4.24 cents on the dollar to 75.025 cents.

The cost of protecting Venezuelan debt against non-payment for five
years with credit-default swaps has fallen 135 basis points to 994
yesterday in that same period, according to data compiled by CMA in New
York.
'Path to Recovery'

Before his health crisis, the president hosted his own television show
most Sundays that lasted up to seven hours without commercial breaks and
sometimes featured spontaneous expropriations of businesses after
followers complained of exploitation.

His improvised speeches have ranged over philosophy, baseball and
diatribes against the U.S. "empire."

Now the former paratrooper has altered what he described as a "lifestyle
of death" and is waking up at 5 a.m. to undergo rehabilitation with his
team of doctors, take medical exams and return to bed early. Chavez said
he has cut down his coffee intake from 40 cups a day to just one or two
cups and has taken up painting again to relax.

"I have faith in God, medical science and our Cuban and Venezuelan
doctors and finally in my own will to live -- to live for my people, for
my daughters and grandchildren and myself -- that we will continue along
the path to recovery," he said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-07-16/chavez-chooses-cuba-over-brazil-for-chemotherapy-cancer-fight.html

No comments:

Post a Comment