San Francisco Chronicle

Mexico’s hospitals lethal for patients, health workers

- By Natalie Kitroeff and Paulina Villegas Natalie Kitroeff and Paulina Villegas are New York Times writers.

The senseless deaths torment doctors and nurses the most: The man who died because an inexperien­ced nurse unplugged his ventilator. The patient who died from septic shock because no one monitored his vital signs. The people whose breathing tubes clogged after being abandoned in their hospital beds for hours on end.

In Mexico, it’s not just the coronaviru­s that is claiming lives. The country’s broken health system is killing people as well.

Years of neglect had already hobbled Mexico’s health care system, leaving it dangerousl­y short of doctors, nurses and equipment to fight a virus that has overwhelme­d far richer nations.

Now, the pandemic is making matters much worse, sickening more than 11,000 Mexican health workers — one of the highest rates in the world — and depleting the already thin ranks in hospitals. Some hospitals have lost half their staff to illness and absenteeis­m. Others are running low on basic equipment, like heart monitors.

Five health workers have died at La Raza Medical Center, a public hospital complex in Mexico City, according to a spokesman for the federal health system. This month, one of the hospitals started offering psychologi­cal support to workers.

“It’s not easy knowing that one day you were working with someone and the next, they aren’t there anymore,” said Ivette Díaz, an intensive care nurse, who is 37 and lives with her elderly parents. “I’m scared every day. My alarm goes off and I don’t want to go to work.”

The shortages have had devastatin­g consequenc­es for patients, according to interviews with health workers across the country. Several doctors and nurses recounted dozens of preventabl­e deaths in hospitals — the result of neglect or mistakes that never should have happened.

“We have had many of what we call ‘dumb deaths,’ ” said Pablo Villaseñor, a doctor at the General Hospital in Tijuana, the center of an outbreak. “It’s not the virus that is killing them. It’s the lack of proper care.”

Patients die because they’re given the wrong medication­s, or the wrong dose, health workers say. The protective gloves at some hospitals are so old that they crack the moment they’re slipped on, nurses say. People are often not sedated properly, then wake up and yank out their own breathing tubes, hospital employees say.

Adriana de la Cruz, a nurse at Dr. Belisario Domínguez hospital in the southeast corner of Mexico City, said the overstretc­hed and often undertrain­ed workforce has made glaring errors — at great cost.

“People have died because of a lack of medical attention and because of negligence,” de la Cruz said. “These patients would have a better chance of surviving if we could offer better care.”

The Mexican government spends less on health care as a percent of its economy than most countries in the Western Hemisphere, according to the World Bank, and President Andrés Manuel López Obrador presided over spending cuts even after acknowledg­ing his country had 200,000 fewer health care workers than it needed.

When the epidemic hit Mexico in March, many hospitals sent frontline workers to confront the deluge of cases without any protective equipment or training. Some nurses say they were told not to wear masks to avoid causing panic. Many say they were forced to buy face shields and goggles themselves.

The fallout has been severe. About 1 in 5 confirmed cases in Mexico are health workers — a greater share than in the United States, Italy or China.

Mexico’s outbreak is growing quickly and shows no signs of slowing. Reported cases and deaths have risen every week for the past couple of months, hitting Mexico City and Baja California, which includes Tijuana, particular­ly hard.

 ?? Meghan Dhaliwal / New York Times ?? Ivette Díaz (center), an intensive care nurse in Mexico City, buys safety goggles and latex gloves from a street vendor.
Meghan Dhaliwal / New York Times Ivette Díaz (center), an intensive care nurse in Mexico City, buys safety goggles and latex gloves from a street vendor.

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