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There’s a hospital ship waiting for sick Puerto Ricans — but no one knows how to get on it

Posted at 6:45 PM, Oct 16, 2017
and last updated 2017-10-16 18:45:40-04

Sammy Rolon is living in a makeshift clinic set up at a school. He has cerebral palsy and epilepsy, and is bed-ridden. He’s waiting for surgery that was scheduled before Hurricane Maria smashed into Puerto Rico. Now he can’t even get the oxygen he needs.

There is help available for the 18-year-old — right offshore. A floating state-of-the-art hospital, the USNS Comfort, could provide critical care, his doctor says.

But nobody knows how to get him there. And Sammy is not alone.

Clinics that are overwhelmed with patients and staff say they don’t even know how to begin sending cases to the ship. Doctors say there’s a rumor that patients have to be admitted to a central hospital before they can be transferred to the Comfort. Only 33 of the 250 beds on the Comfort — 13% — are being used, nearly two weeks after the ship arrived.

The hospital ship was deployed as part of the federal response to the storm and its aftermath that has left 3.4 million Americans facing power and communications outages, water and food shortages and at risk for worsening health conditions.

The USS Comfort is waiting. But Puerto Rico’s Department of Health has to decide which patients can get care aboard the ship. And referrals have been minimal.

CNN’s Leyla Santiago asked Ricardo Rosselló, Governor of Puerto Rico, why so many are in need of help and yet a ship with operating rooms and intensive care units sits nearly empty.

“The disconnect or the apparent disconnect was in the communications flow,” Rosselló said.

He acknowledged the system must get better.

“I asked for a complete revision of that so that we can now start sending more patients over there,” Rosselló said.

For doctors and medics in hospitals and makeshift clinics, time is of the essence. It is difficult for them to watch patients suffer, and not be able to provide answers or direction about whether the USNS Comfort is an option.

Dr. Jorge Rosado, who oversees Sammy’s care at the clinic and works at the San Jorge Children’s Hospital, says the young man is a prime example.

“He can become acutely ill if he continues to be (at the school),” he said. “It’s very frustrating. I know they have the capacity, they have the medical staff, they have the supplies. … To hear there’s only 33 patients in such a big mobile hospital — it’s tough.”

Capt. Kevin Robinson, the Comfort’s mission commander, says help is waiting.

“I know that we have capacity. I know that we have the capability to help. What the situation on the ground is … that’s not in my lane to make a decision,” he said. “Every time that we’ve been tasked by (Puerto Rico’s) medical operation center to respond or bring a patient on, we have responded.”

For Sammy’s father, Jose Cruz, the waiting for a plan is heartbreaking.

“I feel horrible,” he says. “Because I can’t help him.”