COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. — Bassett Medical Center in Cooperstown will send some doctors and nurses to the Puerto Rican island of Vieques to help staff a medical clinic for a week as the territory continues recovering from Hurricane Maria, which slammed it in 2017.
A year after the hurricane “plowed through” Puerto Rico, public-health conditions are “still poor” and access to medical assistance and basic health care is “limited,” Bassett said in a news release issued on Sept. 11.
Dr. Celeste Johns, chief of psychiatry; Dr. Chris Kjolhede, a pediatrician, and registered nurses Rachel Gaston and Anna Buell will join eight other volunteers travelling from New York on Sept. 22.
(Sponsored)
Criminal Liability for Employment Law Violations?
New York employers are often surprised to learn that wage law violations can lead to criminal penalties in addition to financial penalties. Whether payroll is outsourced, or a staffing agency
It’s Time for Your Business to Think About Year-End Tax Planning
As the year-end approaches, it’s time to take proactive steps to help lower your business’s taxes for 2024 and beyond. Deferring income and accelerating deductions to minimize taxes can be
The group will provide pediatric and general medical care and post-traumatic stress disorder counseling.
Ahead of the group’s departure, Bassett Medical Center sent a shipment of donated medical supplies — including stethoscopes, blood-pressure cuffs and glucose monitors — “in support” of the medical-relief efforts, per the release.
The Bassett team’s travel to Puerto Rico was organized through the United Methodist Volunteers in Mission (UMVIM). UMVIM is based in Atlanta, Georgia, according to its website.
Maria was a category 4 hurricane when it reached Puerto Rico last September, 2017, causing “catastrophic” damage. The storm destroyed the hospital on the island of Vieques, along with the island’s health and water infrastructure.
Chronically ill patients are “still struggling a year later” to get the care they need. Waterborne and infectious diseases “continue to rise,” and the mental-health crisis Puerto Rico faced before Maria “has worsened,” Bassett said.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com