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Cuban Children’s Heart Hospital Makes Tough Choices Amid US Blockade

Staff Writer with AFP by Staff Writer with AFP
04/01/26
in Featured, World
An old car with the Cuban flag painted on the trunk is seen near the Capitol of Havana in Cuba on January 7, 2015.

Cuba. Photo: Yamil Lage, AFP

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Doctors at Cuba’s main pediatric heart hospital face wrenching decisions as a US fuel blockade further strains an already fragile health system: which children receive life-saving treatment first – and which must wait longer.

During a visit by AFP journalists, mothers wearing medical masks were bedside next to children sitting or laying in dim rooms, with the sun providing the only light through the windows.

Universal health care is one of the proud achievements of the Cuban revolution, but the island’s hospitals have struggled with shortages and aging equipment for years.

The situation has deteriorated since US President Donald Trump imposed a de facto oil blockade in January, with Cubans enduring daily blackouts that last several hours.

Herminia Palenzuela, a 79-year-old doctor, said the William Soler Pediatric Hospital must now make “very difficult” decisions.

Children with the least serious cases are “at the end of the list and simply wait,” she said.

‘Lucky’ So Far

The hospital treats newborns, children, and pregnant women whose fetuses have been diagnosed with severe congenital heart defects.

It has 100 beds, but they are not all used as doctors say they must conserve equipment and medical supplies for the sickest patients.

“Resources are always reserved for that type of patient, because they are the ones who could die at any moment,” said Palenzuela, her face etched with anguish.

“We would like to operate more. We would like to do more, but the resources don’t allow us to do so,” said Palenzuela, who founded the hospital in 1986.

Yaima Sanchez waited in a dimly lit hallway for her nine-year-old son to be seen and given the portable device needed to monitor his heart rate.

“I come here with the faith that the doctors will see me with whatever they have available,” said Sanchez, whose son has tachycardia, an abnormally fast heartbeat.

“Sometimes the device isn’t there, or it’s dead because there are no batteries,” she told AFP. “So far, we’ve been lucky, but you never know.”

‘Dramatic Levels’

With daily blackouts affecting Cubans across the island – including two nationwide outages last week alone – the government has prioritized hospitals, which are equipped with generators to ensure they never go dark.

Palenzuela said she can only visit the hospital three times a week. Colleagues walk several kilometers to work every day. A transport system has been set up for health workers, but not all have access to it.

In Havana, nurses and doctors in white lab coats are among people seen hitchhiking along the capital’s famous Malecon seafront promenade.

According to the health ministry, more than 96,000 Cubans, including 11,000 children, are waiting for surgery due to the energy crisis.

The director of the William Soler hospital, Eugenio Selmam, said a US trade embargo in force since 1962 has always made it difficult for Cuba to get medicine and medical equipment.

“It’s something we have lived with for decades,” Selmam said. “But now, with this new situation, it has reached dramatic levels.”

The United Nations, which is in talks with Washington to allow imports of fuel for its aid work in Cuba, has proposed an action plan to keep critical services running in the country.

“If the current situation continues and the country’s fuel reserves are exhausted, we do fear a rapid deterioration, with the potential loss of life,” the UN’s coordinator in Cuba, Francisco Pichon, said.

The hospital last week received a shipment of medicine, food and hygiene products from an international humanitarian aid convoy that brought 50 tons of supplies to Cuba by sea and air.

“The situation is clearly complicated,” said Martina Steinwurzel, a 41-year-old Italian activist and member of the Our America Convoy.

As volunteers and medical staff stacked boxes of donated supplies in a hospital room, Steinwurzel looked around and said: “These are people who have resisted for many years, and now they are living through a siege they have never experienced in their history.”

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Staff Writer with AFP

Staff Writer with AFP

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