‘No Patient Deserves This’: Doctors, Nurses Say Trump Blockade Is Killing Sick Cubans

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Original article by Brett Wilkins republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). 

A doctor talks to a patient in the cardiology room of the Calixto Garcia Hospital in Havana on February 12, 2024.
 (Photo by Yamil Lage/AFP via Getty Images)

“We do everything with love to assist people, but the reality right now is that we don’t have enough resources,” said one Cuban doctor, who added that “the main cause of everything is the USA.”

The Trump administration’s oil blockade of Cuba—an escalation of the 65-year US stranglehold on the socialist island’s economy—is killing Cubans amid a severe shortage of electricity and critical basic medical supplies, doctors and nurses there told reporters this week.

“I can’t tell you how many deaths, but I’m sure there are more than in the same period last year,” Dr. Alioth Fernandez, chief anesthesiologist at William Soler Pediatric Hospital in Havana, told The New York Times in an article published Friday. “I see it in shift handovers, in colleagues’ comments, and in children I’ve operated on.”

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Cuba’s universal healthcare system is internationally known. Its “Army of White Coats” has been deployed around the world, both to provide routine and specialized care, as well as during emergencies such as the Haiti earthquake, Sierra Leone Ebola outbreak, and Covid-19 pandemic in Italy.

Despite decades of success under increasingly adverse conditions, Cuba’s vaunted health system is under tremendous strain, due in no small part to the cumulative effects of generations of US economic sanctions.

“Since I was born, this is the most difficult time, without any doubt,” José Carlos, a resident intern at Havana Cardiology Institute, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation on Thursday. “We do everything with love to assist people, but the reality right now is that we don’t have enough resources.”

The lack of fuel is limiting ambulance service and keeping many doctors and other medical professionals from commuting to hospitals that are canceling surgeries and discharging patients early. As Common Dreams reported earlier this week, more than 96,000 Cubans—including 11,000 children—are waiting for surgery due to the fuel shortage.

“Everything is hitting us—energy, resources, transportation,” Carlos told the CBC.

When the lights go out, neonatal nurses use hand-pumped ventilators to keep infants alive. Without power, hospitals and clinics can’t administer chemotherapy cycles or dialysis treatments.

“I don’t know how long we can keep going,” Xenia Álvarez, the mother of a 21-year-old man who suffers a rare genetic disease and requires full-time use of a ventilator, told The New York Times.

Shortages of basic medicines and supplies are forcing doctors to substitute medications, delay treatments, or even ask patients’ relatives to find supplies themselves. Antibiotics, painkillers, and medications to treat chronic diseases are scarce, as are gloves, syringes, and diagnostic equipment. Hospital staff also report difficulty maintaining sterile conditions.

While the US government claims that humanitarian goods like medicine are exempt from sanctions, critics counter that the fuel blockade, along with severe restrictions on banking and shipping, effectively block many medical supplies from reaching the island. The Trump administration has also been pressuring countries into expelling the lifesaving Cuban medical teams, sparking widespread outrage and condemnation.

After the Fidel Castro-led revolution that ousted the US-backed dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, the United States imposed an economic embargo on the island that has been perennially condemned by an overwhelming majority of United Nations member states for 33 years. Cuba says US sanctions have cost its economy more than $200 billion in inflation-adjusted losses.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently admitted that the economic chokehold is meant to force political change in Cuba while simultaneously disparaging the Cuban economy as “dysfunctional.”

Rubio also said that although President Donald Trump is currently focused on the US-Israeli war of choice on Iran—one of seven nations attacked since the self-proclaimed “president of peace” returned to the White House—he would “be doing something with Cuba very soon.”

Trump said earlier this month that he believes he’ll “be having the honor of taking Cuba,” language echoing the 19th century US imperialists who conquered the island along with Puerto Rico and the Philippines from Spain.

In addition to patients, the crisis in Cuba is also taking a physical and psychological toll on Cuban doctors—who, even with a recent raise earn just 100 pesos, or about $2.40, per 12-hour shift. This, in a country in which a dozen eggs cost nearly $10. Many doctors rely upon side hustles to get by.

“Doctors’ pay is just for basic things,” said Carlos. “It doesn’t allow you to buy many things in the supermarket or go to a restaurant or a hotel, or things like that.”

Breakdowns and burnout are on the rise.

“I’ve seen doctors cry,” one physician, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation, told Reuters. “With this crisis, they cry. They’ve stopped working, they’ve become depressed. You can see it on their faces.”

Despite the worsening situation, Carlos told the CBC that he does not want to leave Cuba, and blamed the US for the crisis.

“The main cause of everything is the USA,” he said. “I have no doubt about that.”

Some do want to leave, blaming their own government as well the US embargo for Cuba’s suffering. Others are taking things one day at a time.

“We don’t know what will happen,” a nurse who gave only her first name, Rita, told the CBC, “so we just keep working.”

The mounting—and preventable—deaths in Cuba are prompting renewed calls for the US to lift sanctions on Cuba.

“No patient deserves this. Trump’s cruel Cuban blockade is killing people unnecessarily,” National Nurses United, the largest US nurses’ union, said on social media Friday. “Depriving Cubans of essential resources needed to sustain life and health is an unconscionable violation of human rights. Nurses say: End the blockade now!”

Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) also weighed in during a Thursday floor speech in which she said that “Cuba poses no threat to us, yet we are strangling an entire nation with economic warfare.”

“Families are going without food. Water systems are failing. Hospitals are struggling to stay open,” she continued. “These tactics are designed to suffocate an island into submission. Make no mistake: This unconscionable suffering is occurring because Trump is trying to force regime change.”

“Hands off Cuba,” Omar added. “End the blockade now.”

Donald Trump sings and dances, says that it's fun to kill everyone ...
Donald Trump sings and dances, says that it’s fun to kill everyone …

Continue Reading‘No Patient Deserves This’: Doctors, Nurses Say Trump Blockade Is Killing Sick Cubans

Patients ‘would rather risk dying at home than go through torture’ of corridor care

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/patients-would-rather-risk-dying-home-go-through-torture-corridor-care

 A general view of staff on a NHS hospital ward

Nurses share harrowing accounts of a ‘broken system’

NURSES have shared harrowing accounts of a “broken system” of corridor care that “tortures” patients, with people left in chairs for days and one patient choking to death, unnoticed.

Publishing new findings on the practice today, the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) warned that collapsing NHS care standards are pushing staff morale “past the point of no return.” 

The report comes a year after a previous damning investigation by the union into corridor care.

RCN contacted thousands of nurses who contributed to last year’s report to assess whether corridor care was still being used and its impact.

Responses from 436 nurses showed the practice remains widespread.

Nurses described having to hold up white sheets to protect patient dignity while performing intimate procedures. 

At one hospital, an elderly patient was forced to eat in a corridor beside someone who was vomiting.

A nurse working in the NHS in south-west England said patients felt “deeply embarrassed, objectified, judged, uncared for” and like “a burden on a broken system.”

They are often “wishing they had never bothered to come in and would rather have taken the risk of dying at home than go through the torture,” the nurse said. 

“Because that’s what we subject them to, a type of torture.”

Article continues at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/patients-would-rather-risk-dying-home-go-through-torture-corridor-care

Continue ReadingPatients ‘would rather risk dying at home than go through torture’ of corridor care

Gaza: Doctors under attack

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Louisa Compton, Channel 4 Head of News and Current Affairs and Specialist Factual and Sport said

The job of journalists is to tell the stories that people need to know. Often, that means telling stories that other people, the people who are subjects of our investigations, would rather were not heard.

Few situations in the world today have illustrated those two truisms more clearly than the October 7 massacres in Israel and the 21 months of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza that followed.

One of the ways in which the reality of that situation has been reported – and to many people’s way of thinking has been under-reported – is the story of how the fighting has embroiled the medical services operating in Gaza. 

On Wednesday night, Channel 4 will screen Gaza: Doctors Under Attack, a documentary produced during much of that long period of conflict, which offers powerful evidence that the doctors, nurses and paramedics of Gaza have been denied the non-combatant protection that the norms of warfare usually offer them.

Their hospitals have become combat zones, their very operating theatres have been conscripted into the military theatre of operations.

One side says this has happened through the deliberate choice of their enemy. The other side says it is an unavoidable result of their enemy’s tactics.

Perhaps this is the new normal of warfare, because the whole conflict, from the first murderous moments of the October 7th massacre of innocents to the latest report of machine guns aimed at food queues, has shifted norms in disturbing ways.

In this particular aspect, each side accuses the other of denying medicine its neutrality. The Israel Defence Force says Hamas uses hospitals, patients and medical staff as shields for terrorist headquarters; Gaza’s health authorities and medics accuse the IDF of besieging those hospitals, forcibly evacuating those patients, detaining, terrorising, brutalising and targeting those doctors, nurses and support staff.

In video that is terribly hard to watch and with testimony delivered through tears and anguish, this documentary presents evidence that Israel’s armed forces have deliberately dragged those offering medical aid into the frontline. It also reports the IDF’s strong denials of allegations that medics were tortured.

We are showing this programme because we believe that, following thorough fact-checking and verification, we are presenting a duly impartial view of a subject that both divides opinion and frequently provokes dispute about what constitutes a fact. 

Channel 4 has a strong tradition of putting uncomfortable reporting in front of our audiences. In doing so, we know we will antagonise somebody somewhere sometime. But we do it because we believe it is our duty to tell important journalistic stories – especially those that aren’t being told elsewhere.

21.50 edit: Louisa Compton, Channel 4 Head of News and Current Affairs and Specialist Factual and Sport continued

Doctors Under Attack, was commissioned by another broadcaster which took a different view of the original content and decided not to broadcast it.

That other broadcaster will have had its own reasons for not showing the programme. For ourselves, after rigorous fact-checking and assessing the film against our own editorial criteria as well as against all regulatory requirements, we decided that it was both compliant with the Ofcom Broadcasting Code, but also that it was important journalism in the public interest. Any small changes were carried out with the producers to update the film and give viewers as much information as possible.

The result is harrowing, no doubt. It will make people angry, whichever side they take, or if they take no side.

But while we would never judge anyone who decides that showing something could create a risk of being thought to be taking sides, we believe there are times when the same risk is run by not showing anything at all.

dizzy: The other broadcaster referred to is BBC.

Experiencing issues with this image not appearing. I suspect because it's so critical of Zionist Keir Starmer's support of and complicity in Israel's genocides.
Genocide denier and Current UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is quoted that he supports Zionism without qualification. He also confirms that UK air force support has been essential in Israel’s mass-murdering genocide. Includes URLs https://www.declassifieduk.org/keir-starmers-100-spy-flights-over-gaza-in-support-of-israel/ and https://youtu.be/O74hZCKKdpA
Keir Starmer objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone obect to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza's hospitals and universities,mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.
Keir Starmer objects to criticism of the IDF. He asks how could anyone obect to them starving people to death, forced marches like the Nazis did, bombing Gaza’s hospitals and universities,mass-murdering journalists, healthworkers and starving people queuing for food, killing and raping prisoners and murdering children. He calls for people to stop obstructing his genocide for Israel.
UK Labour Party government ministers Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves explain that they are partners complicit in Israel's Gaza genocide. The UK has provided Israel with arms, military and air force support. They explain that they don't do gas chambers but do do forced marches, starvation, destroy hospitals, mass-murders of journalists and healthcare workers.
UK Labour Party government ministers Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves explain that they are partners complicit in Israel’s Gaza genocide. The UK has provided Israel with arms, military and air force support. They explain that they don’t do gas chambers but do do forced marches, starvation, destroy hospitals, mass-murders of journalists and healthcare workers.
Continue ReadingGaza: Doctors under attack

London hospital advertises for ‘corridor care’ nurses

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/london-hospital-advertises-for-corridor-care-nurses

The emergency department at Midland Metropolitan University Hospital, Smethwick, January 8, 2025

Royal College of Emergency Medicine says advertisement is ‘normalising’ patients being treated in the corridors

A LONDON hospital has advertising for “corridor care” nurses because so many A&E patients are being cared for while waiting for beds or treatment.

The 12-hour shifts were advertised by Whittington hospital in north London.

The Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) said the advertisement indicated the “normalising” of patients being treated in the corridors of hospital A&E departments.

Retired paediatrician Dr John Puntis, co-chair of campaign group Keep Our NHS Public, said: “There can be no bleaker illustration of the current state of the NHS than ‘care’ delivered in corridors.

“Winter pressures on an already overstretched service were entirely predictable.

“Six months in power and Labour has done nothing pro-active to alleviate this situation.”

He accused the government of instead “throwing money at the private sector.”

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/london-hospital-advertises-for-corridor-care-nurses

Continue ReadingLondon hospital advertises for ‘corridor care’ nurses

Teachers and NHS workers’ unions ‘put the government on notice’ over below-inflation pay rises

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/teachers-and-nhs-workers-unions-put-the-government-on-notice-over-below-inflation-pay-rises

Royal College of Nursing (RCN) chief executive Pat Cullen (second right front row) joins members of the RCN on the picket line outside the Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, as nurses take industrial action over pay, January 18, 2023

TEACHER and NHS worker unions threatened strike action today over government-backed below-inflation public-sector pay rises.

The Department of Health and Social Care, the Cabinet Office and the Department for Education have recommended 2.8 per cent unfunded rises for 2025-26 to pay review bodies after Chancellor Rachel Reeves ordered all departments to cut costs by 5 per cent.

TUC general secretary Paul Nowak said: “There are real concerns across the trade union movement about the government’s recommendation.

“The government must now engage unions and the millions of public-sector workers we represent in a serious conversation about public service reform and delivery.

“It’s hard to see how you address the crisis in our services without meaningful pay rises.

“And it’s hard to see how services cut to the bone by 14 years of Tory government will find significant cash savings.

“In the longer term, we need a spending review that gives hope to those delivering and relying on our public services.”

Article continues at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/teachers-and-nhs-workers-unions-put-the-government-on-notice-over-below-inflation-pay-rises

Keir Starmer confirms that he's proud to be a red Tory continuing austerity and targeting poor and disabled scum.
Keir Starmer confirms that he’s proud to be a red Tory continuing austerity and targeting poor and disabled scum.
Continue ReadingTeachers and NHS workers’ unions ‘put the government on notice’ over below-inflation pay rises