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Patients are treated in the lobby of Ishinomaki Red Cross Hospital in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture,

"There is no food" - patients left without rations in quake-stricken Japanese hospitals

Some hospitals have been left without food, power or running water.

WITHIN THE DARK and fetid wards of the Senen General Hospital, some 120 patients lie in their beds or slumped in wheelchairs, moaning incoherently.

“There is no food!” cries an old man in a blue gown, to no one in particular.

Last week’s powerful earthquake and tsunami heaped untold new misery on those already suffering — thousands of elderly, infirm and sick people in hospitals that were laid to waste by the violent shaking and the walls of water that followed. There are no figures yet on how many hospitals were ravaged, but few could have escaped unscathed given the scale of the destruction.

Sam Taylor, the spokesman for Doctors Without Borders, an international group that has sent a team to Japan, said there were longer-term concerns about the elderly, many of whom are fragile and may be living on little food and water without their lifesaving medicines.

“They have some medicines for the immediate future, but in the coming weeks that’s when it really could become an issue,” he said.

Senen General Hospital in Takajo town, near Miyagi prefecture’s capital of Sendai, had about 200 patients when the earthquake hit, tossing its medical equipment around and collapsing part of the ceiling in one wing.

All of its food and medicine was stored on the first floor. Everything was ruined or lost in the 30 minutes when Takajo, a small town of about 12,000, was flooded by the tsunami.

Staff and patients forced to share frozen noodles

“We’re only administering the bare necessities,” said administrator Ryoichi Hashiguchi.

So far four patients have died, all older than 90 and severely sick even before the calamity. Another 80 that could be moved were sent to a nearby shelter.

There is no power or running water, and for the first two days the staff and patients shared some frozen noodles and vegetables they salvaged from a toppled freezer.

The nurses have been cutting open soiled intravenous packs and scrubbing down muddy packs of pills with alcohol to cleanse them. A gut-wrenching stench from the bathroom, after several days of waterless use by hundreds of people, was clear from half a building away.

No aid came from the government the first two days, but some rice balls were handed out on Monday. A relative of a worker donated a flooded generator, which two men were trying to get working outside. The local gas company set up a set of burners outside to warm food and water.

“I’m sorry, we have no medicine”

From the outside the hospital looks abandoned, with thick mud layered across the parking lot, and a jumble of cars piled up by the tsunami.

“I’m sorry, we have no medicine,” the staff repeatedly told a constant flow of people from the town, many of them elderly.

Hashiguchi said he has been in contact with city officials, and told them that the conditions of many patients is worsening.

“I don’t think this is going to be resolved any time soon,” he said.

- AP

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