Venezuelans turn to alternative medicine amid shortages

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CARACAS, Oct 8, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The small waiting room at the home of
self-styled healer “Brother Guayanes” in Caracas’ rundown Petare district
fills up quickly with patients — business has never been better.

With Venezuela’s chronic medicine shortages and hyperinflation, more and
more people are turning to alternative medicine to treat common ailments in
the crisis-wracked South American country.

“We go to the hospital and there’s nothing there. They don’t have
medicines, or they’re too expensive, what are we to do?” said Rosa Saez, 77,
who has come to get treatment for a painful arm.

Carlos Rosales — he uses the more ceremonious “Brother Guayanes” for his
business — is finishing up a “spiritual intervention” on a patient in what
passes for his surgery.

The patient lies, eyes closed, on a cot as, in a series of swishes and
clicks, the healer waves five pairs of scissors one after another over his
prone body.

The healer says he performs 200 such interventions a week in a dim, candle-
lit room that features two camp beds and an array of plaster statues that
Rosales says represent “spiritual entities”.

A regular visitor to the spiritual center, Saez says she has faith in
Rosales’ methods: “He healed my kidneys.” – Natural healing –

All across Venezuela, but particularly in poor areas like Petare, patients
cannot hope to afford the price of medicines that due to the economic crisis,
have become exceedingly rare.

Venezuela’s pharmacists’ federation say pharmacies and hospitals have on
average only about 20 percent of the medicine stock needed.

Rosales’ clinic is muggy with the smell of tobacco. A crucifix suspended
from a chain around his neck, he practices a seeming mixture of smoke-blowing
shamanism, plant-based medicine and mainstream religion.

Posters hung near the entrance remind clients to arrive with a candle and
tobacco and “Don’t forget that payment is in cash”.

Much like a general practitioner, Rosales spends time consulting with his
patients, examining them with a stethoscope, before offering a diagnosis.
Often he prescribes potions based on plants and fruit, such as pineapple and
a type of local squash known as chayote.

“We know medicines are necessary,” he says. “I’m not against medicine, but
my medicine is botany.” – Plants replace drugs –

At her stall in a downtown Caracas market, 72-year-old Lilia Reyes says she
has seen her trade in medicinal plants flourish.

“I can’t keep up with the demand,” she said at her stall, bathed in the
aroma of camomile, one of the 150 plants she sells.

Careless consumption of some herbs can be deadly, warns Grismery Morillo. A
doctor at a Caracas public hospital, she says she has seen many cases of
acute liver failure in people who have eaten certain roots.

According to Venezuela’s opposition parties, some 300,000 chronically ill
people are in danger of dying from the shortages of medicines.

But despite the risks, people like Carmen Teresa say they have no
alternative.

In the kitchen of her restaurant which closed down three years ago as the
economic crisis took hold, the 58-year-old Colombian prepares an infusion of
fig leaves to treat “diabetic neuropathy”.

The painkillers needed for the condition are “too expensive” and prices are
going up due to hyperinflation, so she is cutting back on the pills and
supplementing her treatment with herbal infusions.

She needs at least four tablets a day to keep her diabetes at bay. Her
mother, bedridden since breaking a leg a year ago, suffers from Alzheimer’s
disease and needs five pills a day for hypertension.

“I’m still taking my pills, but I reduced the dose,” says Teresa, who is
also replacing cholesterol pills with lemon juice.