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Ivonne Ramirez had experienced a few hurricanes in her life, but nothing prepared the Puerto Rican for the sheer destructive force of Maria that struck her island in the early morning of 20 September 2017 as a category 4 hurricane. When the power supply failed late the Tuesday night before, she huddled together with her family in the darkness, waiting for the storm to hit and hoping it would spare her house in the islandĢýs capital of San Juan. ĢýAround midnight we heard a loud bang and a pop. My son started screaming, and I ran to find out what had happened. It was like a scene from a horror movie,Ģý recalls Ramirez. ĢýWe felt as if this hurricane wanted to wipe us off the island.Ģý
As a gray and wet morning dawned, the full extent of the stormĢýs devastation became clear to Ramirez. The roads in her gated community were mostly impassable, blocked by trees and downed power lines. The whole island was without telephone or electricity. Ramirez knew what to do next: she had to get to Los Paseos, the islandĢýs largest dialysis clinic operated by Ģý, where she worked, as quickly as possible, to check for any damage. As clinic manager at the facility, she knew that her patientsĢý survival depended on her ability to get things sorted out immediately.
ĢýWe had gotten ready as best as we could Ģý giving patients the necessary resources like an emergency diet list, treatment orders and the support hotline number. We had covered all the machines and secured the unit. But we had not expected this amount of devastation, and I wanted to get the place up and running again.Ģý Ramirez ran down her list of contacts for maintenance and clinic staff and managed to get in touch with them. By the morning of 21 September, Los Paseos was the only clinic on the island ready to receive dialysis patients.
ĢýIt was quite a sight,Ģý Ramirez says. ĢýMore than 200 people were waiting to receive treatment. Luckily, we have 60 seats so we were able to give every person who was waiting a three-hour treatment. We started at around 8 am and worked through until 3 am the next day,Ģý she says. The story of Los Paseos and how it saved the day by providing life-saving medical care to dialysis patients not only represented a rare beacon of hope in the grim aftermath of Hurricane Maria, but also points to the importance of having a well-laid-out disaster response plan in place.
As Puerto Rico struggled to get back on its feet, Ģý experts arrived on chartered planes to help respond to the disaster. They brought with them pallets of food and vital supplies, and worked with local staff like Ivonne Ramirez around the clock to guarantee water and fuel deliveries for the 28 clinics on the island. "The hardest thing to deal with was the total collapse of communications,Ģý says Bob Loeper, Vice President for Operations Support and Business Continuity at Ģý, who arrived in Puerto Rico the following Monday. "ItĢýs the one thing that took us by surprise.Ģý
What struck him as he stepped off the plane from Miami was how eerie everything looked: "everything had been wiped out. On leaving the airport, I wondered why so many people were parked on a bridge. It turned out they were trying to get a signal from one of the few cell towers still working.Ģý Once on the ground, Loeper requested water and fuel supplies for the Ģý clinics.
LoeperĢýs team faced two main challenges in the aftermath of the storm: on the one hand, they had to make sure the clinics were operational, to provide life-sustaining dialysis treatments. On the other, this required running generators and replenishing water supplies. When Maria struck, there were a total of 6,000 dialysis patients living on Puerto Rico, 4,200 of whom were treated by Ģý. The authorities had to evacuate an additional 89 patients from Saint Thomas, one of the US Virgin Islands, to escape Hurricane Irma, adding to the workload at Los Paseos.
ĢýĢý truly excelled in its response to Maria,Ģý Ramirez says, looking back. Based on the experience gained during Hurricane Maria, Ģý increased the number of personal generators on the island from around 100 to 370 units to supply power to the employeesĢý homes and shipped in two backup clinic generators on trailers.
The company also set up guarded gas cylinders throughout the island that hold around 350 gallons (1,300 litres) each so that staff could refill their cars and generator gas cans without having to wait for hours at the pumps. ĢýWe live by a simple motto,Ģý Loeper explains. ĢýWe take care of our staff, so they can take care of our patients.Ģý Loeper has also been working hard to ensure that the clinics are better prepared in case of a complete breakdown of communications networks. Besides satellite phones, Ģý facilities on Puerto Rico now have half a dozen amateur radio stations and staff are being trained to become licensed radio operators.