Venezuela’s healthcare system is under significant strain, the World ​Health Organization said on Tuesday, with ‌some hospitals damaged and others missing staff after deadly twin earthquakes last week.More than 1,700 people ​have been killed and 5,000 injured ​after hundreds of…

Venezuela’s healthcare system is under significant strain, the World ​Health Organization said on Tuesday, with ‌some hospitals damaged and others missing staff after deadly twin earthquakes last week.More than 1,700 people ​have been killed and 5,000 injured ​after hundreds of buildings were flattened ⁠or damaged by the back-to-back 7.2- and ​7.5-magnitude quakes.At least three health centres are ​critically damaged and six others are damaged or only partially functional, WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told ​a Geneva press briefing.“The rest remain ​operational (but) under significant strain,” he said, referring to a ‌survey ⁠of 21 health facilities.“Preliminary findings reveal chaotic service delivery and patient flow, marked by overcrowding (and) growing surgical backlogs,” he added.Several ​healthcare workers specialised ​in ⁠maternity care in La Guaira remain missing, he said, creating what ​he called a critical gap ​in ⁠obstetric care.The thousands of people displaced by the quakes are also at risk of ⁠disease ​outbreaks like yellow fever ​and dengue, especially given relatively low vaccination coverage, he said.Source: Reuters--Agencies