Blemishes in Calixto Hospital / Fernando Damaso
Posted on March 16, 2014
A few weeks ago I was "driven" to Calixto García General Hospital by a
doctor friend who, like the Orisha deity Elegguá, opened doors for me.
The purpose of my visit was to receive medical attention. I have no
complaints about the professionalism of the medical staff who, in spite
of the difficulties and shortages with which they must deal, work hard
to provide a good service to their patients, whom they treat with
kindness and concern. This experience allowed me to see first-hand the
current state of the above-mentioned hospital, which for some years now
has been subjected to a prolonged series of unending repairs after
decades of neglect.
Construction activity is evident everywhere: dilapidated medical wings,
demolitions in-progress, building materials stored outdoors and inside
the hospital, mechanical equipment being moved, construction workers
going back and forth without doing anything, people shouting and other
signs of activity. In the few areas that have been completed, one can
see details such as sloppy plaster work on the walls and crooked tiles
on the floors, signs that the repairs will not last long.
I do not know who came up with the brilliant idea of putting the various
medical departments' outpatient clinics in the basements of their
respective wards, both the ruined and the repaired. Access to these
clinics is either along broken sidewalks and pathways, or through steep,
narrow exterior stairs. There are no ramps provided for the physically
handicapped so wheelchairs cannot be used, forcing families of the
patients to cart them up and down in a dangerous and embarrassing display.
The clinics' waiting rooms, which are without air-conditioning or good
ventilation, are veritable saunas, making them unbearable for the
patients seeking treatment. It would be better to not even mention the
older buildings, which suffer from roof leaks, flooded floors, peeling
walls and broken doors. Dirt and decay abound and seem be be everywhere
in the health service's facilities. It is hard to imagine how services
can continue to be offered in such wretched and unsanitary conditions.
Physicians lack even the most basic clinical tools such as light panels
to view X-rays and computers to read test results. They often have no
more than a table, two chairs and, at best, a stretcher, all in a state
of deterioration.
One can observe a shortage of specialists to treat patients, which
causes significant backlogs and wasted time for the clinics' medical and
nursing staffs, who carry on long conversations about problems in their
personal lives, often using inappropriate language, while patients wait
to be treated.
Those who manage to get into the waiting rooms quickly become bored
reading the extensive propaganda slogans lining the walls, which remind
them of the fallacy that "medical care is provided free at the expense
of the State." (In reality it is provided at the expense of its
citizens.) They seem like commands, ordering everyone to accept it all
with resignation. Meanwhile, others mill around outside, sitting on the
sidewalks, fences and even the grass while awaiting their turns.
If there is an operation planned, then the process stretches out
interminably. First there are various tests and analyses to be
performed. Waiting for test results drags it out further. Then there is
the wait to be admitted to the hospital, which can take months and often
ends in bitter disappointment if tests have to be repeated because they
are out of date.
Operating rooms show signs of an advanced state of decay. In recently
renovated wings where post-operative patients are held, there is an
obvious absence of a responsible administration as evidenced by a
shortage of sanitary fixtures. Only one out three sinks is operable and
showers lack their necessary hardware.
The situation is no better when it comes to janitorial services, which
are performed by unqualified staff, who simply spread the dirt around by
trying to clean an entire wing with one bucket of water. Even then,
everything is done reluctantly, accompanied by constant complaining.
It should also be noted that those working in food service, which in
general is badly prepared, do so in their street clothes, without using
gowns, masks, hair coverings or gloves. During the day food vendors
proliferate throughout the hallways, selling sandwiches, peanuts,
coffee, chocolates, cookies and other items in clear violation of the
regulations that should govern a health facility.
It seems that, in spite of all the construction activity and resources
invested, there are still some blemishes in Calixto. Despite good
medical care, in the end its hospital services leave that patients with
bad memories. They are forced to put up with them because, unlike
foreigners and VIP patients, they do not to have access to the
specialized centers which are featured in news reports and shown to
visitors who still believe in the myth of "Cuban medical prowess."
8 March 2014
Source: Blemishes in Calixto Hospital / Fernando Damaso | Translating
Cuba -
http://translatingcuba.com/blemishes-in-calixto-hospital-fernando-damaso/
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment