Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition
Disease from rich ravages Latin America’s poor
BOGOTA, Colombia — The passenger from Spain that Sonia Sanchez picked up at the airport in Colombia’s capital in March did not seem well.
He coughed during the Uber ride in her small Chevrolet Spark, as he sat next to her, a precaution many of the app’s drivers use to avoid attracting the attention — and harassment — of police.
A few days later, the mother of two had a soaring fever, her relatives say. Within three weeks, she was dead — the first coronavirus patient to die in Bogota’s working-class Kennedy neighborhood, now a hot spot of infections.
“The only thing we have of her is her ashes,” said her brother, Oscar Sanchez.
Sonia Sanchez’s story illustrates a phenomenon emerging in Latin American nations and other developing countries: The virus initially brought to the region largely by wealthy citizens or visitors coming from Europe and the United States is now increasingly concentrated in poorer neighborhoods where residents have few means of protecting themselves.
“Epidemics are not democratic at all,” said Diego Armus, a professor of Latin American history at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. “We know this because those who have suffered the most are the poor.”
In megacities throughout the region — from Bogota to Sao Paulo; Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Santiago, Chile — infections first emerged about three months ago in upper-class neighborhoods. Data from city health bulletins show many of those areas have succeeded in slowing the virus, in large part because residents there are able to stay indoors, working from home or living off savings until the crisis passes.
The disease took longer to reach the poorer areas of those cities, but now infections are surging in those heavily congested neighborhoods, and hospitals are stretched. Kennedy had few infections at the end of March, weeks after the first case was confirmed in Bogota, but now has over 2,000, the highest number in the city.
The migration of the disease from rich to poor has been seen elsewhere: In South Africa, the first few hundred cases were virtually all in people who had traveled to Europe; Cape Town, a city popular with international tourists, has more than half of the country’s total confirmed cases, and its shantytowns are major hot spots. The phenomenon is especially stark
in Latin America, the most unequal region in the world behind sub-Saharan Africa.
Sonia Sanchez, 53, was born in Colombia’s impoverished countryside and raised in Bogota. She spent much of her adult life selling home appliances. After Uber entered Colombia in 2013, she decided to try her luck, paying an acquaintance to use his car. She almost always had passengers ride up front, looking to avoid the suspicion of police in a country where Uber has operated on shaky legal standing.
The earnings allowed her to rent a small apartment near Kennedy and to help support her children.
Colombia announced its first coronavirus case March 6 — a 19-year-old who had been studying in Italy. Though the crisis was gathering steam in Europe, it still felt distant in Colombia. Though the Spaniard she picked up March 10 had a cough, Sonia didn’t immediately worry.
That changed a few days later, when she spiked a fever.
“She felt it intuitively,” Oscar Sanchez said. She told her relatives to keep their distance.
She was refused care at the local Red Cross and a hospital and had to wait another week before getting treatment. By then, she was struggling to breathe.
“Am I going to die?” she texted her brother.
By April, similar stories were surfacing in Argentina, Chile, Brazil and Mexico.
In Buenos Aires, 48% of cases were initially concentrated in four of the city’s wealthiest neighborhoods. Since then, cases in trendy Palermo have risen from around 40 in early April to 135 by May. But in workingclass Flores, the increase has been sharper — from about 20 cases to 435.
Big cities in Brazil — the epicenter of Latin America’s outbreak — have seen a similar dynamic. The first case in Sao Paulo was a 61-year-old man diagnosed in late February who had been in the hard-hit region of Lombardy, Italy. He was treated at one of the city’s best hospitals in the upscale Morumbi neighborhood. Cases there have ticked up, but zones that are home to sprawling slums and working-class neighborhoods are seeing some of the largest jumps.
Latin America is home to five of the world’s 30 largest cities, and they are highly segregated. The poor often live in conditions ripe for the spread of the coronavirus: more people in smaller homes, many of whom are unable to abide by strict quarantines because they must go to work or out to buy food.
As more of the poor fall sick, the hospitals that serve them are emerging as some of the most stretched. At the public Arzobispo Loayza Hospital in downtown Lima, Peru, dozens of patients are sleeping in wheelchairs and even sharing access to oxygen, according to an ombudsman report. At the Bogota hospital where the first case was diagnosed, only about 5% of all intensive care unit beds are currently occupied. But in Kennedy, the ICUs at two of the largest hospitals are operating at over 80% capacity.
In 1961, late U.S. President John F. Kennedy helped lay the first bricks in the Bogota neighborhood that now bears his name. The original plan was to house 126,000 people; today it is home to an estimated 1.5 million.
Doctors at Kennedy Hospital, the area’s major public hospital, say years of treating gunshot wounds, injuries from assaults and a hefty load of chronic conditions means they are uniquely prepared for an onslaught of complicated virus cases.
Sonia Sanchez spent her last week of life on a ventilator at Kennedy Hospital.
After her death, the family gathered in a video conference to share stories. But her brother tears up thinking about her spending those final days in the hospital alone; being taken for cremation alone.
He does not harbor anger toward the passenger the family believes infected her, but he does wonder: “Who else crossed his path?”
“Epidemics are not democratic at all. We know this because those who have suffered the most are the poor.” — Diego Armus, professor of Latin American history, Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania