What is true, what is false and what is misleading at the inauguration of the vaccination center of El Salvador Hospital

From the capacity of El Salvador Hospital to the advancement of vaccination in Central America, this was Bukele’s speech at the inauguration of the COVID vaccination center.

El Salvador Hospital was created to function as an exclusive hospital for patients with COVID-19. Although the government initially stated that it would be ready in June 2020, it took more than a year to complete the third phase. On April 12, President Nayib Bukele announced that the third phase of El Salvador Hospital, which was planned as an area with several intensive care units, will today be a vaccination center.

But the president’s speech had some true, false and misleading facts. El Diario de Hoy checks some of them:

“Phase I (of El Salvador Hospital) arrived just in time for our health system to overflow” – FALSE

Phase I of El Salvador Hospital was inaugurated on June 21, 2020; For that month, COVID cases were at their highest since the first case was reported in March. As of that day, there were already 2046 active cases and 107 deaths attributed to COVID. In addition, the government reported 182 positive cases in one day, the highest number of new cases to date, according to the official website covid19.gob.sv. Some doctors were already talking about the collapse of hospitals.

Deaths attributed to “atypical pneumonia”, respiratory distress, respiratory failure and cardiorespiratory arrest were already multiplying in the death registers, which for the doctors consulted by El Diario de Hoy were suspicious deaths of COVID-19.

In addition, although the Government inaugurated Phase I, it took at least a month for the medical staff to follow the hospital to be hired. So when the hospital became operational, the case curve reached its highest level, a number that has not been recorded since March 2020.

Bukele also assured that once this phase is over, the press will have access to that place. It never happened. El Diario de Hoy requested access twelve times and was denied.

You can read: What happens if I don’t get vaccinated?

“400 beds with everything you need (phase I). This is how we decongest the health system ”- FALSE

Since the inauguration of El Salvador Hospital, Bukele has provided inaccurate data on the center’s hospital capacity. A document published on the Presidency’s website last year stated that the first phase of El Salvador Hospital, located between Pavilions 1 and Centroamericano (formerly Cifco), actually had 105 beds for the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and not 400 as stated. by Bukele.

Yesterday, April 12, Bukele added another piece of information: he said the hospital network already has 1,130 intensive care units, but this figure has not been confirmed because neither the government has presented images of total capacity, nor has the press access to the verification site.

“We have the highest number of vaccines in the region not only at the per capita level, but also at the total level” – FALSE

“Our World in Data,” an Oxford University publication, shows the number of doses applied to Central American residents since December. The countries with the most doses applied are Costa Rica and Panama, with up to 500,000 doses delivered by April 11 this year. Costa Rica began vaccination in December.

Then El Salvador and Guatemala follow with up to 200,000 doses applied. Finally, there is Honduras, the country with the lowest demand so far. There is no data for Nicaragua.

Another way to analyze the evolution of vaccination in Central America is to compare the number of people completely vaccinated by country. Costa Rica leads with 213,562 fully vaccinated people, followed by Panama with 157,100; Honduras with 2,639; Guatemala with 1,639 and El Salvador who do not report data on this.

Costa Rica and Panama were the first countries in the region to start vaccinating their inhabitants. El Salvador administers the first doses in less than a month.

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“We never got to occupy even 60% of capacity (at El Salvador Hospital” – DECEITABLE

There are no public data on the capacity of El Salvador Hospital and there are no data on the hospitalization, discharge and deaths of COVID-19 patients treated on the spot. In fact, pandemic information has been reserved by the government for up to seven years.

On March 24 this year, the Ministry of Health declared the full reservation of information related to the application and purchase of vaccines against COVID-19, thus prohibiting access to these data for up to 5 years. Likewise, the “Register of SARS-Cov-2 vaccination booths” will be reserved for three years.

But it was not the only information that the government put in place. Most official information related to handling, procurement and pandemic statistics has been declared confidential.

“We have had an increase (in cases) in recent days” – misleading

The new numbers of cases are constantly rising and falling, resulting in a new case diagram that seems to get lost before the peak of July and August 2020.

In addition, data on new cases are being delayed by the Government. It is not uncommon for two, three or even twelve days to pass without being updated. Google’s record of positive cases in the country is distorted when there are days when the official page does not report new cases: the Google chart reports zero cases when this happens, because the government publishes the data days later.

The last delay occurred between April 4 and 12, the Government did not publish data on new cases. How do you see an increase in cases in recent days without this data?

In December last year, researcher and academician Oscar Picardo Joao said: “It is statistically worrying (that the data is not up to date) because the epidemiological picture is disfigured.

“El Salvador has inherited a precarious health system” – TRUE

In 2014, several specialists from the Rosales National Hospital reported to El Diario de Hoy the lack of medicines, the deterioration and lack of technological equipment, the deterioration of the hospital infrastructure, the beds that were no longer functioning and the operating rooms with equipment up to 15 years old.

Although facilities have been renovated so far in this government, new equipment has been purchased and staff have been hired to participate in the pandemic, and complaints about the lack of medicines for cancer patients, for example, continue. ISSS had to provide equipment for the operation of El Salvador Hospital last year. Even today, Bukele announced that medical staff will be transferred to the vaccination center at El Salvador Hospital to meet the demand.

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