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The response of the Nicaraguan government to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has been perhaps the most erratic of any country in the world to date. Directly contradicting mitigation strategies recommended by WHO, President Daniel Ortega has refused to encourage any physical distancing measures. Vice President Rosario Murillo (Daniel Ortega’s wife) instead called on thousands of sympathisers to congregate in street marches under the slogan “love in the time of COVID-19”. By downplaying the danger of the pandemic and increasing the risk of community transmission in the second-poorest country in the western hemisphere,
the Nicaraguan government is violating the human rights of its citizens.
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A leaked document from the Nicaraguan Health Ministry has underscored the probable consequences of this haphazard response. Public health officials have privately predicted that up to 32 500 Nicaraguans could test positive for COVID-19, 8125 of whom could have severe symptoms and 1016 of whom might require intensive care beds.
Nicaragua has only 160 ventilators available, 80% of which are currently in use.
If the government’s senior leadership continues to ignore calls for strong mitigation efforts, the fragile public health infrastructure could collapse under the pressure of widespread infection.
Meanwhile, other central American countries have responded proactively to the pandemic. El Salvador instituted a nationwide 30-day quarantine, along with strict travel restrictions.
Neighbouring Costa Rica and Honduras have also closed borders. Indeed, nearly every country in Latin America—including poorly-resourced and crisis-ridden governments, such as those of Venezuela, Honduras, and Guatemala—has taken action to mitigate the spread of the disease. The Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele criticised the absence of social distancing measures in Nicaragua, suggesting that the country’s negligence could pose a risk to the region and undermine the plans of neighbouring countries to confront the pandemic.
The health infrastructure and medical community in Nicaragua, already beset by difficulties inflicted by a capricious political regime, are ill-equipped to withstand a massive influx of severely ill patients to hospitals. At 0·9 hospital beds per 1000 people, Nicaragua lags behind the Latin American average of 2·2 beds per 1000 people.
Further, Nicaragua is the poorest country in central America, with a third of Nicaraguans living in poverty and nearly 10% living in extreme poverty.
Other countries with more resources than Nicaragua are struggling to contain infections and deaths from the virus.
The World Factbook, Nicaragua2020
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/print_nu.html
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https://confidencial.com.ni/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Protocolo_Coronoavirus.pdf
https://confidencial.com.ni/hospitales-sin-ventiladores-suficientes-pacientes-criticos-por-covid-19/
(March 23, 2020).
https://www.as-coa.org/articles/where-coronavirus-latin-america#elsalvador#elsalvador
https://qcostarica.com/el-salvador-president-concerned-about-neglect-of-the-daniel-ortega-government-of-coronavirus/
World Health Organization, 2020
https://apps.who.int/gho/data/view.main.HS07v
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30131-5
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Charley Naney