Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 9
Doctors Report Post-Quake Illness Surge in Venezuela as UN Seeks $300 Million for 1.3 Million
Updated
Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 9

Doctors Report Post-Quake Illness Surge in Venezuela as UN Seeks $300 Million for 1.3 Million

3 articles · Updated · The Associated Press · Jul 9

Summary

  • Doctors in La Guaira said skin infections, diarrheal disease and demand for diabetes and blood-pressure drugs are rising two weeks after Venezuela’s June 24 twin earthquakes.
  • Crowded shelters and long-poor water and sanitation are driving the shift from trauma care to longer-term health needs, with about 18,000 people displaced after 190 buildings collapsed and 856 were damaged.
  • The health response is also strained because 50% of La Guaira’s health professionals were directly affected by the disaster, Pan-American Health Organization representative Armando Denegri said.
  • The United Nations has appealed for roughly $300 million to help 1.3 million people, while estimating $37 billion in direct damage to housing and infrastructure.
  • Aid on the ground is being led largely by local NGOs working with global groups and backed heavily by U.S. funding, in a notable shift from years of Venezuelan government repression of such organizations.

Insights

Is US disaster aid a lifeline for Venezuela's people or a political gambit for its oil?
Can an earthquake rebuild a nation already shattered by political and economic collapse?
With aid flowing in, is Venezuela seeing a true political shift or just a temporary truce?