Large town, small hospital
Amelia Duarte de la
Rosa
(Photo by the author)
BASSIN Bleu is an hour's drive from
Port-de-Paix, capital of Haiti’s Nord-Oueste
department. While it is not the best in the area,
neither is it the worst, although the commune, with
more than 50,000 inhabitants, has no drinking water,
paved streets or electricity. The only movement is
around the small community reference hospital, the
only one providing services free of charge and
operated for the last two years by Cuban doctors.
Patients
arrive here from the entire Nord-Oueste region: on
foot, in rustic carts, on motorcycles, or on
stretchers carried down the mountainsides. There is
nothing new in this routine for the 24 Cuban
volunteers, but still, there are always surprises.
Every case, every person represents a sad and
precarious history.
To tour the hospital’s six rooms is
a moving experience; that is the case in any
hospital, but this one also emanates altruism.
Sounds of pain in the corridors are eased by the
Cuban doctors' kind attention and professionalism.
In the first aid room, the medical doctor's office,
the clinical laboratory, the emergency room,
intensive care, surgery, rehabilitation, pediatrics,
gynecological-obstetrics, sonogram, infirmary and
pharmacy, everyone works tirelessly. Time is short
to take care of so many lives.
A young boy eight years of age
arrives at the hospital, accompanied by his father.
His scant clothing is evident, as is his emaciated
body and scabbed, infected skin. He presents an
appalling image. His name is Drazzilien Dorelis and
he has generalized piodermitis.
This condition is common among
Haitian children. Poor living conditions, lack of
hygiene, overcrowding and damp homes account for the
presence of this bacterial infection produced by
staphylococcus and streptococcus.
Drazzilien cried during the medical
exam, not knowing that the local and intravenous
treatment will be more painful. The good news is
that, within 72 hours, he will have improved; the
bad news is that, unless his living conditions
change, the problem will inevitably reappear.
In the hospital, the flow of people
continues unabated, but it is not a sad day at the
end of it all. Another patient, Alita Alen, is in
post-operative recovery, after being operated on for
peritonitis caused by a burst ovarian tube abscess.
She arrived at the hospital in a life-threatening
state after walking more than 60 kilometers. She had
no money to pay for treatment at the Port-de-Paix
health center. In the delivery room, a 19-year-old
woman gave birth to a baby girl while another woman
rested alongside her twin babies.
At the hospital exit, Enrique Scarli
expressed his appreciation of the medical care
provided there. His six-year-old son had undergone
surgery for a groin hernia; he claimed that had it
not been for the presence of the Cuban doctors, his
son would have died. He concluded by saying, "We
Haitians have a saying that goes: in Haiti, the
Cuban doctors come after God." One of the best
places for verifying that proverb is Bassin Bleu, a
great hospital for all who need it.