Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Parents protest against lack of medications for cancer treatment

Parents of children with cancer protested in Xalapa, Veracruz, on Tuesday to denounce a longstanding shortage of cancer medications in the state’s hospitals.

Gathering from all over the state, the parents demanded life-saving medications such as vincristine, folinic acid, cytarabine and even catheters to combat what they say is an ongoing shortage.

Said one of the protesters’s signs: “Our children run the risk of dying without their chemotherapy.”

Protester Maricarmen Mendoza said that over 100 children have not received their medication since October, along with some adult patients.

“The [children’s condition] needs to be controlled with chemotherapy . . . if they don’t receive it their illness keeps advancing and becomes more dangerous,” she said.

She called out the administration of Veracruz Governor Cuitláhuac García Jiménez for the lack of medications.

“We’re going to [protest] until the [health] secretary gives us an answer as to why there has always been a shortage . . .” she said.

A mother of a young girl with leukemia, Karla Arias, said that she has to spend as much as 10,000 pesos (US $532) a month on outpatient chemotherapy, since the shortage has raised the prices of medicines that normally cost 100 pesos to as high as 850.

“I have to pay for the medicine, the shipping . . . so that my daughter can have her complete therapy,” she said.

She wanted to know what state Health Secretary Robert Ramos Alor has done with the half a million pesos allocated for each juvenile cancer patient by law via the Catastrophic Expenses Insurance, since it hasn’t gone to buying medicine for the children.

She and other parents have had problems with medications for their children in the past.

Former governor Miguel Ángel Yunes accused the administration of ex-governor Javier Duarte of administering watered-down medicine to children with cancer.

“The chemotherapy administered to children wasn’t really medicine, but an inert compound, it was practically distilled water. This seems to me to be an incredible sin, an attack on the lives of the children,” he told a press conference in 2017.

The Mexican Association to Help Children with Cancer called the deception a serious act that threatened the lives, health and recovery of the children and said it should be treated as a crime against humanity.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Suspended supermarket in Tulum

More than a dozen Tulum businesses temporarily shut down due to price gouging

0
Punished establishments in the already troubled resort town included the hotels Diamante K Tulum, Pocna Tulum, Villa Pescadores and Cabañas Playa Condesa Tulum.
During the presentation on Saturday, the governor of Oaxaca thanked the president for working to repay a historic debt to the Indigenous peoples of the Mixtec region.

‘We’re not going to leave La Mixteca’: Sheinbaum pledges sustained regional investment in visit to Oaxaca

0
Plan Lázaro Cárdenas, launched last year, aims to address critical gaps in infrastructure, healthcare, education, cultural preservation and economic development in one of Mexico's poorest regions.
shoppers

Mexico’s inflation rate crept up to 3.61% during the first half of November

1
The rise was more than expected and could have been worse if El Buen Fin hadn't put downward pressure on prices in the first two weeks of the month.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity