The brother of a injured Cuban migrant who spent more than a month in intensive care in Mexico, asked for help to obtain supplies for the young man's recovery.
Michel Pina, undergoing neurosurgery in mid-August at the National Rehabilitation Institute (INR), in the Tlalpan mayor's office, in Mexico City, he was in intensive care until this Thursday and his brother appeals to the solidarity of Cubans to get diapers and wet wipes.
As he told the editors of CyberCuba Carlos Cowell Carveat, his brother Michel follows connected to equipment who monitor your vital signs.
The young people, without family in Mexico, have been passing through medical institutions for more than two months after Michel had an accident in the city of Chetumal, in Quintana Roo.
The young man, 31 years old, suffered a "anterolisthesis" and a rachimedullary trauma, due to a fracture-dislocation of the C4 cervical vertebra, and presented “high risk of mortality,” according to his clinical record.
The fracture, which left him immobilized and in intensive care, occurred when he fell from a hammock after breaking the palm tree that supported it, according to the brother's own version.
He was admitted on August 1 to the Emergency Room of the Chetumal General Hospital, where he remained for 10 days, but due to the lack of specialists and in critical condition, he was transferred to Mexico City to be treated by a neurosurgeon, thanks to the intervention. of the National Human Rights Commission, which has followed the case and provided help to Michel's brother.
On August 17, Michel was able to undergo neurosurgery and has stable signs, although he had some bleeding due to an ulcer.
Beginning a recovery phase that could take up to three months, Carlos, the brother, requests the help and cooperation of Cubans who are sensitive to his case. Meanwhile, he continues to take care of his brother day and night, providing him with the attention he requires.
He has survived on his few savings and the little help that has come to him, in addition to the support of the National Human Rights Commission.
Both young people had arrived in Mexico with the hope of making an appointment through the CBP One application and entering the United States, where their mother has been for a short time.
For any help you can provide, Carlos indicated his phone number +525639530987.
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