The Asian Age

Indonesian medics exhausted by quake casualties

At least 84 got killed and thousands left homeless after 6.2-magnitude of earthquake

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Mamuju (Indonesia), Jan. 18: Medics battled exhaustion and the risk of Covid19 as they raced on Monday to treat scores of people injured by a devastatin­g earthquake on Indonesia’s Sulawesi island.

At least 84 were killed and thousands left homeless by the 6.2-magnitude quake that struck early on Friday, reducing buildings to a tangled mass of twisted metal and chunks of concrete in the seaside city of Mamuju.

Doctors in hazard suits treated patients with broken limbs and other injuries at a makeshift medical centre set up outside the only one of the city’s hospitals that survived relatively intact — one was flattened by the violent tremor.

A handful of doctors and nurses worked “non-stop” in the first couple of days after the quake until reinforcem­ents arrived, but it was still barely enough amid shortages of medicine and other supplies.

“We were completely overwhelme­d at one point,” said Indahwati Nursyamsi, director of West Sulawesi General Hospital.

“My nurses were also quake victims and had to help their families.”Medics scrambled to quarantine Covid19 positive patients in a bid to prevent an outbreak at the crowded open-air triage centre.

Some with coronaviru­s have been put in a prayer room — common in the Muslim majority nation — at the back of the hospital.

The hospital was trying to open up more rooms for surgery and erect additional tents outside to treat the injured.

But fears that another quake could bring down the building added to the challenges as patients, and some staff, refused to stay inside. —

 ?? — AP ?? Rescuers lead a sniffer dog during a search operation at the ruins of a building collapsed in earthquake in Mamuju, in Indonesia on Friday.
— AP Rescuers lead a sniffer dog during a search operation at the ruins of a building collapsed in earthquake in Mamuju, in Indonesia on Friday.

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