TRINIDAD-Regional health authority denies any collapse or breakdown of the healthcare system.

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TRINIDAD-Regional health authority denies any collapse or breakdown of the healthcare system
TRINIDAD-Regional health authority denies any collapse or breakdown of the healthcare system

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, CMC – The North West Regional Health Authority (NWRHA) has dismissed claims that the healthcare system in Trinidad and Tobago has collapsed amid “speculation and misinformation” surrounding the deaths of newborn babies in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of the Port of Spain General Hospital.

NWRHA, in a statement on Saturday, said the collapse claims were “unfortunate and irresponsible.”

“The nation’s healthcare facilities are fully functional, including the NICU at the Port of Spain General Hospital and the thousands of healthcare professionals who go out to work night and day to care for the nation’s sick, remain dedicated and professional in carrying out their duties,” it said.

The NWRHA’s comments come amid continued media coverage of the deaths of seven babies at the NICU between April 2 and 9 from late-onset neonatal sepsis. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) will be doing an independent investigation into the babies’ deaths.

The infants’ parents, in the meantime, have retained legal counsel, and last week, a pre-action protocol letter was sent to the NWRHA by attorneys from Freedom Law Chambers ahead of a proposed class action medical negligence lawsuit.

Since then, several other mothers have come forward about losing babies who were in NICU, though not within the April 2 to 9 period.

In its statement, the NWRHA said that because of the legal action being taken, it was not in a position to correct much “speculation and misinformation put into the public domain.”

“This notwithstanding, we think it important to share some indisputable facts, if only for general knowledge and to assure our current and future patient population. There has been no collapse or breakdown of the healthcare system in Trinidad and Tobago,” it said.

It stressed that the root cause of the infant deaths is still to be determined and will be.

“Of equal importance is finding out how and why the deaths occurred and the steps necessary to prevent a recurrence,” the NWRHA said. “This is the subject of the investigation that PAHO is conducting at the request of the Ministry of Health alongside the NWHRA’s internal investigation.”

The head of the NWRHA’s Infection Prevention Control Unit has been sent on administrative leave pending the outcome of the probes.

The NWHRA, which said its NIC accepts the most minor and sickest babies from all the Regional Health Authorities in the twin-island republic, reported that in 2023, of the 403 babies – 19 percent of all live births that year – admitted, 19 died. That resulted in a neonatal mortality rate of 8 per 1,000 live births.

It acknowledged that the previous year, that rate was 6.2 per 1,000 live births but noted that “there were fewer congenital anomalies that year.”

Using figures from a 2021 World Bank report, the NWRHA pointed out that the rate in Barbados was the same as the 2023 rate in Trinidad. It cited other Caribbean nations: Jamaica, 10 per 1,000 live births; Suriname, 11 per 1,000 live births; and Guyana, 17 per 1,000.

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