There must be a relationship between maintenance negligence and the health and well-being of citizens, community decay, and crime. I extrapolate this from the article of Tuesday, February 18 by the eminent Dr David Bratt, who enlightened readers on what caring for the health of the public means. He wrote that the act of “making a diagnosis and injecting a drug is not caring for the patient,” that concern for patients’ “mental, emotional, social needs,” and “respect for their dignity and self-esteem” are essential aspects of their care.
Health must be viewed holistically. In his engaging piece, he referred to the “old and run down, gloomy and dirty” Port-of-Spain General Hospital building with its crowded and uncomfortable waiting room, the non-functioning filthy bathrooms, the absence of maintenance, the late serving of meals, forcing patients to bring their own, and the harm caused to patients, especially the older ones—an utter lack of respect for citizens.
Indeed, I can testify to the truth of what he said, having had the experience of visiting a relative at that hospital not long ago. I recall the shabbiness of the environment, patients’ urine being taken out, and some having spilt in the doorway of the ward. To my horror, the following day, when I visited, the urine was gelled brown in the same spot.
No doubt the health authorities will say they care because they’re building new hospitals and that the POS hospital is old, but an impressive, well-equipped new one is nearing completion, oblivious of the fact that the issues are notorious negligence in the maintenance of public infrastructure and the quality standard of care.
As Dr Bratt said, competence and compassion cannot exist without each other. Competence includes proactiveness when it comes to public health. For example, vaping among young people is increasing, and outlets are springing up everywhere. However, there are serious health dangers to vapers and those around them. While statistics on vaping are not available, the emergence of several outlets is evidence of increasing demand.
A vape pen is a delivery system which heats up liquid nicotine flavouring, propylene glycol, and other additives, forming an aerosol with dangerous chemicals, causing collapsed lungs, organ damage, and other health conditions.
The devices can explode, projecting sharp, hot objects harmful to others. Still, the Ministry of Health has not taken legislative action similar to about 40 countries that have bans on vaping, for possession and use, sales, importation, or a combination of measures.
Besides health and hospital maintenance issues, we are witnessing the tragedy Ariapita Avenue has become—in that once clean and beautiful Woodbrook neighbourhood. The Mayor of Port-of-Spain, Chinua Alleyne, was sworn into office in 2023, promising to make decisions guided by “communication, innovate, prioritise local government reform, address homelessness and littering, fix roads, and transform the city,” presumably for the better. He took pride in creating the “Caribbean’s first Chinatown on Charlotte Street.” We are accustomed to political sh**-talk.
Fast forward to 2025. Stroll down Chinatown and experience a shanty town with the Chinese décor in shambles; cross Brian Lara Promenade, mindful of vagrants and holding your nose; head for Ariapita Avenue under black, coiling snakes of overhead wires; view the haphazard accumulation of businesses and hoardings—no sense of planning, cleanliness, compassion for Woodbrook’s residents, pride in our country, and respect for orderly development.
If one’s psyche doesn’t react to the shabbiness and the wanton supplanting of the country’s natural beauty by seediness, then there must be high public immunity to horror. Cringe at the once peaceful Adam Smith Square, now a vagrant paradise—stink and scary.
Who is accountable? The PoS Corporation’s mission is to provide local services that improve “the quality of life” of the city’s burgesses. Who is responsible for wasting taxpayers’ dollars on the ugly, pink, slippery tiles on Ariapita Avenue sidewalks, now breaking off, and the blue lights heralding the Trini version of a red-light district—fruits of someone’s shallow thought process?
Both the hospital situation and the state of the Avenue demonstrate that money isn’t the problem but a dearth of innovation, productivity, efficient resource utilisation, service quality monitoring and consequence management. No accountability.
The high price of maintenance negligence is public health, safety, and community decay—the backdrop of crime and corruption.