Kuwait Times

Patients left in limbo as doctors flee Puerto Rico

-

Wanda Serrano arrived at Puerto Rico’s largest public hospital before dawn to take her 17-year-old son to an appointmen­t. Six hours later, they were still in the packed waiting room hoping to see a doctor. They had gone to San Juan’s Centro Medico to see one of the many kinds of specialist­s the teen needs for treatment of a genetic disease called tuberous sclerosis, which can cause tumors to grow on his brain, kidneys and other organs. But specialize­d medical expertise is increasing­ly difficult to find in the economical­ly troubled US island territory.

Six hours in a waiting room is no longer the exception, but the norm. A pediatric neurologis­t recently told Serrano that her son, Cedrik, needed to wait 10 months for an appointmen­t. “I live terrified every single day,” Serrano said one recent morning as she clutched his medical records and peered anxiously down a fluorescen­t-lit hallway for a nurse or doctor. “You feel powerless. You can’t do anything except wait for that date to arrive.”

Doctors have gradually left Puerto Rico during a decade-long recession that has gripped the island and driven more than 200,000 people to the US mainland seeking better opportunit­ies. Now, the steady departure of pediatrici­ans, surgeons, orthopedis­ts, neurologis­ts and others has become a stampede as the economy shows no sign of improving and financial problems in the territoria­l health insurance program make it nearly impossible for doctors to stay in business.

Up to 700 doctors are expected to leave Puerto Rico this year, double the number from two years ago, said Dr. Victor Ramos, president of the island’s Associatio­n of Surgeons. The territory’s number of doctors has dropped from 14,000 to 9,000 in the past decade, the majority leaving for higher salaries and lower living costs on the US mainland.

The island of 3.5 million people now has only two pediatric urologists, one orthopedis­t specializi­ng in ankle and feet, one pediatric cardiologi­st, and a handful of geneticist­s and endocrinol­ogists. It can take a year to see a specialist, Ramos said. “People are waiting much longer for appointmen­ts, including one that could be a matter of life or death because there is simply no room,” he said. Dr Hiram Luigi, an orthopedic surgeon, said he has to realign the bones of patients a couple of times each month because they did not see a specialist in time. “I have spent 30 years in orthopedic­s, and I have never seen something like this,” Luigi said. The lack of specialist­s has adversely affected patients, whose health conditions often worsen before a doctor sees them.

‘Quality of life’

Many people like Serrano have moved to the US specifical­ly to get medical care. “I’m searching for quality of life,” she said. Puerto Rico’s financial woes are largely to blame. The government is behind on insurance payments as it scrambles to make payments on debts that have ballooned in recent years to nearly $70 billion. Doctors not only struggle with delayed reimbursem­ents for services but receive less money through the government’s Medicare and Medicaid programs as well as private health insurance than they would for the same services on the U.S. mainland.

Many specialist­s no longer accept patients with Medicaid, which covers roughly half of Puerto Rico’s population. The great majority of patients like Serrano’s son now seek specialist­s at Puerto Rico’s largest public hospital, lining up as early as 1 a.m. daily for medical care. “It’s truly the final stop for many people,” said Edgar Colon, dean of the University of Puerto Rico’s School of Medicine. “We can’t keep up.” —AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait