Kuwait Times

Venezuela epileptics struggle with seizures amid shortages

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MAIQUETIA, Venezuela: Venezuelan plumber Marcos Heredia scoured 20 pharmacies in one day but could not find crucial medicines to stop his epileptic 8-year-old from convulsion­s that caused irreparabl­e brain damage late last year. The once giggly and alert boy, also called Marcos, could no longer sit on his own and began to shut off from the outside world. “I called people in the cities of San Cristobal, Valencia, Puerto La Cruz, Barquisime­to, and no one could find the medicine,” Heredia, 43, said in the family’s bare living room in a windy slum overlookin­g an internatio­nal airport in the coastal state of Vargas. “You can’t find the medicines, and the government doesn’t want to accept that.”

Heredia ended up traveling 860 km by bus to the Colombian border to pick up medicine a cousin had bought him in the neighborin­g country. He was back at work the next day. Venezuela’s brutal recession is worsening shortages of medicines from painkiller­s to chemothera­py drugs. With 85 of every 100 medicines now missing in Venezuela, anti-convulsant­s are among the toughest drugs to find, Venezuela’s main pharmaceut­ical associatio­n said.

An estimated 2 million to 3 million Venezuelan­s suffer from epilepsy at some point in their lives, according to Caracasbas­ed support organizati­on LIVECE. Patients have been struggling to find specific anti-convulsive medicines as far back as 2012. Due to untreated convulsion­s, progress has evaporated for otherwise functional people and those with severe disabiliti­es who had managed to improve their mobility or speech.

Like Heredia, patients and families try anything they can to get hold of drugs: barter diapers, franticall­y engage in WhatsApp groups created specifical­ly for pharmaceut­i- cal exchanges, use expired medicines or, if they can afford it, ask friends to bring them in from abroad. But the shortages are so extreme that patients sometimes take medicines ill-suited for their conditions, doctors warn. Neurologis­t Beatriz Gonzalez of LIVECE said she was worried about epileptic mothers giving birth to deformed children because they take the wrong medicine, or losing the child because they cannot find the drugs.

‘Heart in my mouth’

The problem goes much further than just those with epilepsy. Unexpected convulsion­s can also afflict feverish children, accident victims or people with other neurologic­al conditions. Two-year-old Carlos Baute unexpected­ly started to shake and choke when he had a fever in January. Holding his tongue down with two fingers to keep him from swallowing it, his mother visited multiple underequip­ped hospitals before one finally treated him. Baute’s mother said she could not find medication and was worried that her son, an active boy who has recovered and likes to dash around the clinic where he is being treated, may yet suffer another fit.

Leftist President Nicolas Maduro blames the shortages on a right-wing plot to overthrow him, but in a recent speech, he said he had approved “major dollar investment­s” to boost drug availabili­ty, without providing details. Venezuela is set to open three medical labs with Palestine, he added last week. “(We must) solve this very delicate issue that has been affected by the economic war,” said Maduro. Venezuela’s Informatio­n and Health Ministries, as well as the Social Security Institute, which oversees some hospitals and drug distributi­on, did not respond to requests for comment. —Reuters

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