Caracas, Venezuela—Two patients died in a major metropolitan hospital today after staff ran out of oxygen and essential antibiotics. The facility has been treating the victims of this week’s earthquakes without a reliable supply chain. Doctors describe the situation as a slow-motion catastrophe. There is no medication left for basic stabilization.
Medical staff have been forced to prioritize those with the highest chance of survival. The two patients who died were in critical condition but required equipment that is currently offline due to power failures. Surgeons are operating by the light of flashlights in some corridors. The hospital is effectively functioning as a holding area rather than a place of healing.
"We are watching people die because we do not have basic gauze or saline," a senior nurse stated. The internal pharmacy was depleted within the first twelve hours of the earthquake. Requests for resupply have been sent to central authorities, but nothing has arrived. The road closures in the region are preventing shipments from reaching the capital.
The deaths were recorded in the emergency ward, which is currently housing three times its intended capacity. Patients are lying on the floor in hallways and common areas. The smell of decay is beginning to permeate the building as sanitation facilities have also failed.
The medical team is exhausted, having worked for over seventy hours without a break. They are operating in shifts, though many have remained on-site due to the difficulty of navigating the city. The emotional burden of losing patients to preventable causes is beginning to break the staff.
Families of the deceased are waiting in the hospital lobby, demanding answers that the staff cannot provide. The lack of information about when aid will arrive is causing tension to flare inside the wards. Security guards have been posted at the entrances to manage the crowd.
Conditions are expected to worsen as the number of patients seeking treatment continues to grow. Many more are arriving with infected wounds from the rubble. Without intervention, medical officials expect the death toll within the hospitals to rise sharply over the next twenty-four hours.
The hospital is currently awaiting an emergency shipment of basic kits from an international NGO. Whether the supplies arrive in time to prevent more deaths remains the only question of consequence for those inside.
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