Monterey Herald

Health: Children can’t get needed organs in Venezuela

- By Regina Garcia Cano and Juan Pablo Arraez

Zoe Martano is no stranger to misery. At 6, she has spent half of her life in and out of a Venezuelan hospital, being prodded and poked, rushed to the ICU and hooked up to IV lines meant to keep her alive until her country’s crises dissipate.

Only then might the young leukemia victim be able to undergo the bone marrow transplant doctors say she desperatel­y needs.

Except for a few charityaid­ed cases, poor Venezuelan children have not received organ or bone marrow transplant­s since 2017. Dozens of children have died since, including 25 this year, according to a parent organizati­on. Only the wealthy in this socialist country can get a transplant.

For Andrea Velázquez, Zoe’s mom, the lives of her daughter and the other roughly 150 children awaiting transplant­s are in the hands of the government of President Nicolás Maduro.

“It is very difficult to explain to a mother who lost her son that ‘Look, we don’t have the resources to make the hospital optimal to do a transplant,’” Velázquez said.

“If the resources were better managed, obviously, we would have better hospitals and we would not be going through what we are going through.”

The troubled South American country once had a successful transplant program. Between 1967 and 2000, more than 3,100 kidney procedures alone took place. By 2016, that number more than doubled thanks to a public-private partnershi­p that included public awareness campaigns, an organ procuremen­t system and assistance for low-income patients.

The National Transplant Organizati­on of Venezuela, privately administer­ed and publicly funded, served minors and adults in need of a variety of organs, including heart, liver and kidneys. But after Maduro took office following the death of President Hugo Chavez in 2013, the government demanded full control of the program.

In June 2017, health officials told the country’s 14 transplant centers that they would be closed for three months to resolve medication-related issues, according to Lucila Cárdenas de Velutini, a member of the organizati­on’s board of directors. The service interrupti­on became permanent.

The country lacks a program to harvest organs from dead people, which was overseen by the organizati­on.

Even some charitable options have been lost. For years, the Houston-based Simon Bolivar Foundation, a charity funded by Citgo, a subsidiary of Venezuela’s state-run oil giant PDVSA, covered the costs of transplant­s for Venezuelan children in other countries. But the foundation stopped paying the bills in 2019 after the U.S. imposed economic sanctions blocking companies from dealing with PDVSA.

The sanctions make it very difficult for Maduro’s government to access overseas assets and earnings, including those from Citgo. Maduro has blamed them for a wide range of issues afflicting Venezuelan­s. But the sanctions do not prohibit transactio­ns involving food and medicines “intended to be used to relieve human suffering,” according to the U.S. Department of Treasury.

Many children waiting for a transplant receive care at a hospital in Caracas. The organizati­on their parents created to push the government into action, Santi y sus Amigos, estimates that over 100 children have died since 2017.

Jeannys Herrera, 9, died three months ago after about two years of waiting for a kidney transplant. Her mother, Gineth Gil, periodical­ly visits her grave at a municipal cemetery in Caracas, sweeping it with a makeshift hand broom and playing music for her child.

“Just as my daughter died with hope, there are other children who are still alive and want hope, want to have a quality of life,” Gil said.

In September, Santi y sus Amigos proposed equipping an abandoned area of a hospital to exclusivel­y provide bone marrow transplant­s — a move it estimated could save at least 60 lives in less than a year.

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