US Navy hospital ship treats 14,500 patients halfway through mission to help Venezuelan refugees

Kris R. Lindstrom/Navy(NEW YORK) —  Medical staff from a U.S. Navy hospital ship have already seen about 14,500 patients during the first half of the ship’s mission to Central and South America to assist Venezuelan refugees who have fled their country in the wake of a devastating economic crisis that has caused shortages of food and medical supplies.

The USNS Comfort hospital ship departed Norfolk on Oct. 11 for an 11-week deployment and has since assisted patients in Ecuador, Peru and Colombia. The ship departs Turbo, Colombia on Tuesday where medical staff have treated 4,280 patients and performed 110 surgeries in the last week, according to U.S. Southern Command.

Patients are seen at both land-based medical sites and on board the ship, depending on the patient’s needs.

The United Nations announced earlier this month that the number of refugees and migrants from Venezuela worldwide had reached three million. Colombia had the highest number of Venezuelan refugees and migrants with over one million, followed by over 500,000 in Peru and over 220,000 in Ecuador, according to the U.N.

The sheer volume of individuals in need can overwhelm local medical services as communities try to accommodate them.

Meanwhile, in a bitter feud with the U.S., Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro has refused all American aid.
 The Comfort’s surgical and medical services include X-rays, a CAT scan unit, dental suite, optometry and lens laboratory, a physical therapy center, and a pharmacy. The ship also maintains up to 5,000 units of blood at any given time for its medical services.

“The ship’s coordination with their host governments to identify patients whose needs can be addressed by the crew has gone very well, and the patient flow has been on par with what was estimated by the mission’s planners,” Jose Ruiz, a spokesperson for U.S. Southern Command, told ABC News on Tuesday.
This week, the U.S. Embassy in Bogota tweeted a photo showing a woman who received an inguinal hernia operation on board the Comfort.
https://twitter.com/USEmbassyBogota/status/1064896466064474112
“There are needy people, we really don’t have possibilities to get the treatments or exams that they have done for us,” the woman said, according to the tweet.

The Comfort is scheduled to arrive at its second-to-last stop of Riohacha, Colombia, on Nov. 23.
 Defense Secretary James Mattis announced that the U.S. would deploy the hospital ship after a visit to Colombia in August in which he met with President Ivan Duque who requested assistance to relieve stress on Colombia’s healthcare system.

Mattis said at the time the ship was an effort to deal with Maduro’s “increasingly isolated regime.”

The U.S. has provided nearly $97 million for Venezuelan refugees since October of 2016, according to the State Department. But that money is directed to countries accepting the refugees, not to Venezuela itself where Maduro does not allow U.S. aid.

United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Mark Green has said the U.S. stands ready to offer humanitarian assistance Venezuela if Maduro allows access.

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