Puerto Rico’s Looming Medical Crisis Is About To Explode

by Mac Slavo | Sep 28, 2017 | Conspiracy Fact and Theory, Emergency Preparedness, Experts | 22 comments

[dipl_text_animator animated_text=”Do you LOVE America? | Do you WANT our borders secured? | Don’t miss on the latest news | Subscribe and stay informed!” animation_layout=”zoom” animation_time=”740ms” animation_hold=”5010ms” _builder_version=”4.24.0″ _module_preset=”default” global_text_settings_text_align=”center” global_text_settings_text_color=”#FFFFFF” global_colors_info=”{}”][/dipl_text_animator]
[contact-form-7 id=”6521033″ title=”Article Subscribe”]

Share

hospitaldamage

It has been one week since Hurricane Maria devastated the island of Puerto Rico. And inside hospitals and clinics, doctors have limited supplies and will soon run out of diesel to power the buildings.

The looming medical crisis is set to explode at any time. Dr. María Rodríguez is the medical director of Concilio de Salud Integral de Loíza, a community health center in a small town in the northeastern portion of Puerto Rico. She told CNN that she only has six hours of diesel left. Fuel distribution has been inconsistent and there just isn’t enough. Once Dr. Rodríguez is out of fuel, she will have no choice but to close her doors.

With the fuel and power shortages, she expects the top health concern in the days ahead will be infectious diseases. As people who need medications do not get them, she predicts mental health issues will become a problem as well. “The desperation that all these people have, they’ve lost everything — on the whole island,” she says.

“What else we can do?” she asks. “I haven’t seen anything like this.” For 24 years, she’s worked at the center, which serves about 15,000 underprivileged patients each year. Despite the possibility of a power outage, she and her co-workers are still trying to provide services to the best of their ability. In normal conditions, the center provides everything from primary care and pharmacy services to X-rays. “We can do some things. I have a stethoscope and the antiseptics and I can prescribe. But the pharmacy can’t work with that, they need the system — they need labs to provide medications to these patients,” Rodríguez says.

“It will get worse before it gets better,” she says. Her feelings are shared by other health care providers on the island as well, who believe a medical crisis is about to unfold. Dr. Robert Fuller, an emergency medicine physician at the University of Connecticut and International Medical Corp. arrived in Puerto Rico to help those whose lives are on the line.

“I didn’t realize it was gonna be corner-to-corner everybody affected by the storm,” says Fuller, squinting into the sunlight. “Every family’s been touched and disturbed in some way or another. And the degree of destruction — the power the storm had — took me by surprise.” Communities are disabled by the storm, he says, yet it’s fuel and electricity that are driving this disruption.

“If we had good logistics and good communications, things could probably settle out a little faster,” Fuller says. However, the lack of those things could lead to a medical problem, since medications might not be delivered where needed. Puerto Rico is a “complicated mess” right now, he says. –CNN

It’s not a matter of human resources, says Dr. Fuller. “It’s a matter of getting the medications and treatments to the people.” It’s also a matter of being able to move around and get services to people, which cannot happen without fuel. Unless medical supplies and fuel to run clinics and hospitals can get to the devastated island, and soon, the looming medical crisis will explode, and it could cost some their lives.

[the_ad_group id=”24571″]

URGENT ON GOLD… as in URGENT

It Took 22 Years to Get to This Point

Gold has been the right asset with which to save your funds in this millennium that began 23 years ago.

Free Exclusive Report

The inevitable Breakout – The two w’s

[email-download download_id=”345496″ contact_form_id=”19fc5e7″]

Related Articles

[the_ad_group id=”30340″]

Comments

Join the conversation!

It’s 100% free and your personal information will never be sold or shared online.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Commenting Policy:

Some comments on this web site are automatically moderated through our Spam protection systems. Please be patient if your comment isn’t immediately available. We’re not trying to censor you, the system just wants to make sure you’re not a robot posting random spam.

This website thrives because of its community. While we support lively debates and understand that people get excited, frustrated or angry at times, we ask that the conversation remain civil. Racism, to include any religious affiliation, will not be tolerated on this site, including the disparagement of people in the comments section.

[dipl_ajax_search search_placeholder=”Article Search” display_fields=”on|on|off|off” search_result_box_bg_color=”#870404″ search_icon_font_size=”20px” search_icon_color=”#870404″ loader_color=”#870404″ _builder_version=”4.17.4″ _module_preset=”default” search_result_item_title_font_size=”14px” search_result_item_excerpt_font_size=”11px” border_color_all_form_field=”#870404″ global_colors_info=”{}”][/dipl_ajax_search]

[the_ad_group id=”30343″]

[the_ad_group id=”30344″]

[620studio_custom_posts post_type=”report” columns=”1″ limit=”1″ category_id=”23503″ caption=”no” date=”no” title=”no”]