Must admit I did think of a long ago story about baby incubators in Kuwait. So cavael emptor:
Yansnier Arias knew it was wrong. It violated the Constitution, not to mention the oath he took as a doctor in Cuba.
He had been sent to Venezuela by the Cuban government, one of thousands of doctors deployed to shore up ties between the two allies and alleviate Venezuela’s collapsing medical system.
But with President Nicolás Maduro’s re-election on the line, not everyone was allowed to be treated, Dr. Arias said.
A 65-year-old patient with heart failure entered his clinic — and urgently needed oxygen, he said. The tanks sat in another room at the ready, he recalled.
But he said his Cuban and Venezuelan superiors told him to use the oxygen as a political weapon instead: Not for medical emergencies that day, but to be doled out closer to the election, part of a national strategy to compel patients to vote for the government.
May 20, 2018, was nearing, he said, and the message was clear: Mr. Maduro needed to win, at any cost.
“There was oxygen, but they didn’t let me use it,” said Dr. Arias, who defected from the Cuban government’s medical program late last year and now lives in Chile. “We had to leave it for the election.” [.....]
BUT it should also be noted the reporter is basing the story on not one interview but interviews with 16 members of Cuba’s medical missions to Venezuela.
Comments
Must admit I did think of a long ago story about baby incubators in Kuwait. So cavael emptor:
BUT it should also be noted the reporter is basing the story on not one interview but interviews with 16 members of Cuba’s medical missions to Venezuela.
by artappraiser on Sun, 03/17/2019 - 12:14pm