
U.S. news
Relief Team in Puerto Rico Brings Aid and Comfort to Elderly
A medical relief team is making sure elderly Puerto Ricans are not forgotten in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria.

Sandra Alvarez, a doctor from Daytona Beach, Florida, examines Mercedes Perez, a resident at the Petroamerica Pagan de Colon assisted living facility in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Oct. 1, 2017.
Alvarez is a member of the San Juan Medical Relief Team which is assisting elderly residents at the facility after Hurricane Maria ravaged the island. The team is mostly volunteers born in Puerto Rico that now live on the U.S. mainland.
Puerto Rico's elderly are made particularly vulnerable by shortages in medication and water and a lack of power that makes it difficult to combat the sweltering heat.



Allison Betof and Maria Smith, a registered nurse from Florida, examine Silvio Perez Chacon.
Chacon developed complications from diabetes and serious infected necrotic skin breakdown on his legs. They persuaded him to be taken to the hospital, warning him that he could lose his leg.




Elmer Vasquez Colon, 80, his wife Gloria Vasquez Diaz, 67, who have been married over 50 years, lie in a bed at the Petroamerica Pagan de Colon assisted living facility.
"I pray for Puerto Rico, Mexico and all the world," said Colon. Both are sick, and their daughter, Lisbeth Vasquez, has been helping but couldn't get the prescriptions they need when she went to the hospital.
Lisbeth Vasquez, who is also sick and has cancer said, " Please don't abandon us."