Thursday, September 4, 1986/The Battalion/Page 3B =$= MSC TOWN HALL’S ell 111 (ime to 6 ople." )osed film, ''I lost hear, Ing when piece of mu the end mis it was timt laved arouc id Greg am le offered i me material attention o id Jim Lei, rd doing! was head:' Short on supplies na hospital can't meet patienfs needs fjqbt C/LLfMy PRESENTS I TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — The |§! doctors at Tijuana General Hos- Ebital are among the best-trained in ^lexico, but for want of basic inedi- lal supplies like surgical gowns and ■vringes, they are practicing little nedicine. From the outside, Tijuana Gen eral is eight stories of concrete and lass, among the most modern Buildings in the developing Tijuana KRiver area. |fl Inside, however, only emergen- Bies are handled, and some 40 pa- Bents a day are turned away. Two I: llle-threatening emergencies at once Bresent a dilemma because the hos- Bital has only one working monitor Bor vital signs. I Onlv two oxygen valves work in an d r, tpe emergencv room, and autopsies inspired | Jt . performed because refnger- ars belcrtBtors for pr< Fanfare :B en . erving bodies are bn tie. "We bB Private hospitals treat those who tBan pay or are covered by social se- sBurity, but the federally funded hos- iBital is the only source of medical .Hire for the teeming border city’s es- Hmated 1 million poor. It is also the hospital where Amer- Kans injured in accidents in north- ■rn Baja California are taken. ■ ■H Tijuana General has laeen vastly bdersupplied since it opened four ears ago. But the problems have grown worse as a series of peso de valuations and falling oil prices have lunk Mexico deeper into debt. I “It’s tough to see a patient that Bleeds treatment and not be able to Bio anything,” said Dr. Jaime Perez Mendez, a urologist and secretary of the hospital’s medical association. Until mid-June, doctors brought their own supplies to the hospital. Because of this, Perez said, the gov ernment in Mexico City paid only lip service to repeated requests for Two life-threatening emergencies at once pre sent a dilemma because the hospital has only one working monitor for vital signs. equipment and supply requests. When the doctors stopped donating from their private practices, elective operations and consultations were halted. The Mexican press called the ac tion a strike, but Perez denied that. “We are going to wait until the equipment is here,” Perez said. “It’s not that we don’t want to work. We don't have the equipment to work.” Only half of the 250 beds are in service. A shortage of orderlies and nurses forces medical students to move patients from floor to floor. Medical students from Mexico City are sent to Tijuana General for training. “In two years, they are going to be out working like general surgeons,” Perez said. “But they are not general surgeons. They do not have the right training because we do not have the equipment.” Throughout the story is repeated. hospital, the MiiiiimiiiiMiiiiiinwm In the intensive care unit. Dr. Jorge Astorga has little to do but see that bedding is changed and patients are made as comfortable as possible. The one monitor for vital signs in the ward is outdated and doesn’t work. Tijuana General has a CAT scan unit and an ultrasound device, both donated by San Diego hospitals, but neither works and the hospital has no money to get them fixed. “We are getting help (from the United States),” Perez said. “But they send us things we don’t need.” Perez stopped short of calling Ti juana General a dumping ground for such equipment, but he said he resents that the American hospitals receive a tax write-off for donating unusable equipment. “It’s not what we need,” he said. “We need the basics.” Acoustic Guitar/Piano Player and Singer in .a/wT^ behind the MSC Poet Office September 18, 1986 S.OOpm Tickets Available At MSC Box Office And At The Door $2.00 "age ol nth an cans a month are hospitalized at Ti juana General, said Charles Neary, vice consul in the American Citizen Services section of the American Consulate in Tijuana. Americans are afraid because they are in a strange environment, he said. “They often refuse treatment and say they want to go home,” Neary said. Through an agreement with Mex ican officials, he said, 90 percent of injured Americans are returned to the United States without hassle. ‘Bridge to nowhere’surprises Oregon city and Poi pes. Emersi u: in the 'I says, “Most ,■ boring ani ■an't possfcl Mine use I 1 lots of di -s drums. I I ASTORIA, Ore. (AP) — Critics llubbed it “the bridge to nowhere," a fc24 million, 4.1-mile boondoggle Ihat would drain the pocketbooks of tlregon and Washington taxpavers lor decades. I Twenty years later, however, inore than a million vehicles an- lually traverse the Astoria Bridge over the Columbia River to reach somewhere, and the toll span is well (on its way to paying for itself. The bridge on U.S. 101 is re- arded today as an important eco- homic asset to this recession-plagued town at the mouth of the Columbia, hnd to the smaller towns to the north that dot the Long Beach peninsula in southwest Washington. "It has proven to be much more successful than they expected,” says Jean Hallaux, who retired recently as a city planner for Astoria. “It’s hard to criticize now.” The bridge, which filled the last gap in the scenic coastal highway be tween Mexico and Canada, replaced two ferries that slowly carried traffic between Astoria and Point Ellice, Wash. The span was called the bridge to nowhere because it didn’t connect Astoria to any like-size town on the north side of the river. The nearest town as big as Astoria, population 9,800, is Aberdeen, Wash., about 60 miles north. The moniker didn’t sit well with most Astorians or residents of the Long Beach peninsula, many of whom saw their quiet coastal towns as unrealized tourist destinations. Today, tourism has surpassed timber, fishing and shipping as the leading industry in Astoria during the summer, thanks in large part to the bridge, Bugas maintains. 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Pkwy, Hwy 30, Emerald Forest/Raintree, Southwood Valley CHANELLO’S Order two 12” pizzas and the one of equal or lesser value will cost only $3! -OR- Order two 16” pizzas and the one of equal or lesser value will cost only $4! -OR- Order two 20” pizzas and the one of equal or lesser value will cost only $5! Coupon includes approprate taxes. Not valid with any other special offer. VOID 10 Sept. 86