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Mozambique’s second biggest hospital shattered after cyclone

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Wet beds stand empty in water-logged wards, workers slosh through the corridors in rubber boots and a nauseating smell permeates the air: Beira's main hospital is stricken, just when it is needed most.

The once-majestic main building of Mozambique's second largest hospital now lies shattered. Part of its roof is torn, rooms are flooded and the walls are cracked -- the terrible work of Tropical Cyclone Idai.

The storm smashed into central Mozambique last Friday, packing winds of up to 194 kilometers (120-mile) per hour.

Beira, a port city of half a million, lay in its path. And the vast hospital that is its pride lay less than 100 metres (yards) from the sapphire waters of the Indian Ocean.

Emergency cases have been arriving at Beira airport but doctors at the hospital are struggling to co...
Emergency cases have been arriving at Beira airport but doctors at the hospital are struggling to cope with the influx -- supplies of blood and diesel are dwindling and the operating theatres have been wrecked
ADRIEN BARBIER, AFP

Roofs were ripped off many of the hospital's buildings and rooms on the ground floor were flooded to a depth of 30 centimetres (12 inches), forcing the evacuation of some wards.

Communications and electricity were cut off, and roads linking Beira to the outside world were washed away or flooded.

- Wrecked operating theatres -

The hospital -- which services 2.2 million people in Sofala province -- is now operating at little more than a third of its capacity.

"We have no choice. Either we send the sick people home or admit them under these conditions," hospital administrator Abu Julio told AFP walking down the corridor of the flooded hospital in gumboots.

Clinical director Ana Tambo said that the hospital was still admitting new patients despite the wreckage.

"We are receiving people injured from flooded areas. Yesterday we received 48 people from Buzi and today we expect to receive more. In five days we expect to receive more than 1,000 people," she said.

Roads linking Beira to the outside world have been been swamped or destroyed
Roads linking Beira to the outside world have been been swamped or destroyed
ADRIEN BARBIER, AFP

One of the biggest headaches is surgery -- the block housing the operating theatres has been extensively damaged.

"We are carrying out surgery only in very dangerous situations, only for pregnant women, Caesareans," said Marcos Quittino, one of the surgeons.

"The risks of infection are high," he said.

The nursery was evacuated before the cyclone struck.

With all power pylons knocked down, the hospital is running on a generator -- and diesel supplies are dwindling.

"It's very difficult dealing with it. We've no electricity since the cyclone. Our diesel reserves are in the red. We need more to save lives," said Tambo.

More than 60 percent of the hospital's buildings were totally or partially destroyed, according Julio.

- Dwindling reserves -

The hospital's blood bank was destroyed and there are very few units that are still fit for transfusion.

"The hospital used to have about 500 units of blood in reserve -- it now has only about 100," said Tambo.

Flooding in Mozambique
Flooding in Mozambique
Valentina BRESCHI, AFP

The shortage poses a domino threat across the province, because smaller hospitals in the region normally draw their supplies from the central hospital.

As a teaching hospital, it had more than 800 students undergoing training in nursing and other healthcare disciplines, but classes have been suspended. This, too, will have a ricochet effect.

"We've around 100 final year students due to graduate this July," Kizito Comissario, director of the training institute, said.

"This is going to cause serious problems not only in Beira but in all the province as local hospitals are waiting for the health technicians we're training here."

Wet beds stand empty in water-logged wards, workers slosh through the corridors in rubber boots and a nauseating smell permeates the air: Beira’s main hospital is stricken, just when it is needed most.

The once-majestic main building of Mozambique’s second largest hospital now lies shattered. Part of its roof is torn, rooms are flooded and the walls are cracked — the terrible work of Tropical Cyclone Idai.

The storm smashed into central Mozambique last Friday, packing winds of up to 194 kilometers (120-mile) per hour.

Beira, a port city of half a million, lay in its path. And the vast hospital that is its pride lay less than 100 metres (yards) from the sapphire waters of the Indian Ocean.

Emergency cases have been arriving at Beira airport but doctors at the hospital are struggling to co...

Emergency cases have been arriving at Beira airport but doctors at the hospital are struggling to cope with the influx — supplies of blood and diesel are dwindling and the operating theatres have been wrecked
ADRIEN BARBIER, AFP

Roofs were ripped off many of the hospital’s buildings and rooms on the ground floor were flooded to a depth of 30 centimetres (12 inches), forcing the evacuation of some wards.

Communications and electricity were cut off, and roads linking Beira to the outside world were washed away or flooded.

– Wrecked operating theatres –

The hospital — which services 2.2 million people in Sofala province — is now operating at little more than a third of its capacity.

“We have no choice. Either we send the sick people home or admit them under these conditions,” hospital administrator Abu Julio told AFP walking down the corridor of the flooded hospital in gumboots.

Clinical director Ana Tambo said that the hospital was still admitting new patients despite the wreckage.

“We are receiving people injured from flooded areas. Yesterday we received 48 people from Buzi and today we expect to receive more. In five days we expect to receive more than 1,000 people,” she said.

Roads linking Beira to the outside world have been been swamped or destroyed

Roads linking Beira to the outside world have been been swamped or destroyed
ADRIEN BARBIER, AFP

One of the biggest headaches is surgery — the block housing the operating theatres has been extensively damaged.

“We are carrying out surgery only in very dangerous situations, only for pregnant women, Caesareans,” said Marcos Quittino, one of the surgeons.

“The risks of infection are high,” he said.

The nursery was evacuated before the cyclone struck.

With all power pylons knocked down, the hospital is running on a generator — and diesel supplies are dwindling.

“It’s very difficult dealing with it. We’ve no electricity since the cyclone. Our diesel reserves are in the red. We need more to save lives,” said Tambo.

More than 60 percent of the hospital’s buildings were totally or partially destroyed, according Julio.

– Dwindling reserves –

The hospital’s blood bank was destroyed and there are very few units that are still fit for transfusion.

“The hospital used to have about 500 units of blood in reserve — it now has only about 100,” said Tambo.

Flooding in Mozambique

Flooding in Mozambique
Valentina BRESCHI, AFP

The shortage poses a domino threat across the province, because smaller hospitals in the region normally draw their supplies from the central hospital.

As a teaching hospital, it had more than 800 students undergoing training in nursing and other healthcare disciplines, but classes have been suspended. This, too, will have a ricochet effect.

“We’ve around 100 final year students due to graduate this July,” Kizito Comissario, director of the training institute, said.

“This is going to cause serious problems not only in Beira but in all the province as local hospitals are waiting for the health technicians we’re training here.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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