A spirit of resilience helps Venezuelans face healthcare challenges after the quakes

A spirit of resilience helps Venezuelans face healthcare challenges after the quakes

A rescue team assists Hernan Gil, a survivor of Venezuela’s twin earthquakes, on July 2, eight days after the quake. In addition to caring for survivors, the country’s medical workers are facing a range of issues in the state of La Guaira, which was devastated by the disaster.

Federico Parra/AFP/via Getty Images


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Federico Parra/AFP/via Getty Images

When the first earthquake hit, Luz Noguera was in the shower.

Noguera, 36, grabbed her keys, forced the door open and ran out into the street in a panic. Her first thoughts were for her kids and family members, and their immediate safety. Then, it was survival.

“We gathered on the main road and stayed there,” she says. “It started to rain, the electricity went out and there was no cell service, no way to contact our families. We spent the whole night in the street.”

Luz Noguera, 36, says she is simply grateful to be alive. "The day after the catastrophe, I took this photo with a smile," she said.

Luz Noguera, 36, says she is simply grateful to be alive after the quakes. “The day after the catastrophe, I took this photo with a smile,” she says.

Family photo


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Family photo

The last thing on Noguera’s mind was her asthma medication — still in a bag on her nightstand.

The numbers following the June 24 earthquakes trace a devastating outline: At least 3,535 dead, with thousands more missing. And some 16,700 injured.

As hopes fade of live rescues from the rubble, health workers have turned their focus to the living. With an estimated 18,000 people now homeless, doctors must face a new wave of health issues — the kind that happen when thousands of people are suddenly displaced in the heat, the rain and the dust.

People displaced by the June 24 earthquakes rest on bunk beds inside a temporary shelter set up at the Jose Maria Vargas sports complex in Catia la Mar, La Guaira state, Venezuela, on July 6.

People displaced by the June 24 earthquakes rest on bunk beds inside a temporary shelter set up at the Jose Maria Vargas sports complex in Catia la Mar, La Guaira state, Venezuela, on July 6.

Miguel Medina/AFP/via Getty Images


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Miguel Medina/AFP/via Getty Images

“We’re seeing diarrhea, respiratory infections — skin diseases, because they’re exposed to the sun for many hours,” says Dr. Eduardo Celades, a senior health adviser for UNICEF.

Dehydration. Asthma attacks. Sunburn. The ailments of normally healthy people, who no longer have easy access to their medications, regular meals, or running water.

“As well, there will be risks of outbreaks — like for example measles, respiratory infections. This is going to be our priority,” Celades tells NPR.

Three hospitals suffered critical structural damage and were knocked out of service during the earthquakes, the World Health Organization said. Several others are only partially functional, with staff doctors and other frontline health workers among the victims of the disaster.

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