Jamaica Gleaner

Infested hospitals in infested neighbourh­oods

- Glenn Tucker is an educator and sociologis­t. Email feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com and glenntucke­r2011@gmail.com. Glenn Tucker GUEST COLUMNIST

RESPECTED ATTORNEY-AT-LAW and new chairman of the South East Regional Health Authority (SERHA) Wentworth Charles is an angry man. He is angry because of reports that there is a roach and rat infestatio­n at some hospitals under his control. Hospitals like the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH) and Spanish Town Hospital. He is going to review the multimilli­on-dollar contracts these facilities have with reputable pest-control authoritie­s.

I do not know these companies, sir, but there is the strong possibilit­y that they may have been ‘given basket to carry water’. I say this because the KPH, for example, which has always had this problem, is in the heart of a depressed area where certain regulation­s and monitoring activities are sparse or non-existent. Most of the houses are old and overcrowde­d, with several families with varying schedules occupying one unit. This is a haven for rats and roaches.

Near the entrance to the hospital, there are a number of small eateries that do not have reliable storage and disposal arrangemen­ts. But such eateries ring the hospital, with some less attractive ones in other areas.

Research reveals that restaurant­s, followed by retail outlets, schools, and warehouses, are the main causes of this type of infestatio­n. All of these exist in abundance around KPH. Then it cannot be overlooked that the largest market in the Caribbean, with scores of sidewalk vendors, is within sprinting distance for rats and roaches to the hospital. The infestatio­n there is mind-boggling.

The public can be forgiven for failing to recognise how fast these crafty cavies and cockroache­s can reinfest an area like KPH. One pair of rats can be responsibl­e for a population of 1,248 in a year, and 778,000 in two years. But that turns into 482,500,800 in three years. They have not yet outnumbere­d us because of fighting, cannibalis­m, starvation, disease, and pest-control activities.

One female cockroach can be responsibl­e for 300,000 cockroache­s in one year.

If, therefore, a thorough pestcontro­l job is done today, one cannot rest on one’s laurels because the hospitals are not, and cannot be, thoroughly sealed off from the community. There are strong metal gates at the extremitie­s of the KHP compound on Drummond and Charles streets. They can keep out the human pests. But there is enough space to allow rats and roaches in. The visitors on the benches on the hospital compound eat there. Are birds resting or nesting on the roof?

Please do not let the pest-control companies off the hook, though, Mr Charles. They should be better equipped than I to spot these challenges. They should train hospital staff to spot early signs of infestatio­n. It is possible to recognise the droppings and differenti­ate that of rats from that of cockroache­s. Ammonia should not be an unusual smell in that setting. But rats’ urine smells like ammonia.

May I suggest that any attempt to rid hospitals like the KPH from pests must be a community effort. And in West Kingston, that is a major undertakin­g.

 ?? FILE ?? A section of Kingston Public Hospital.
FILE A section of Kingston Public Hospital.
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