The Cuban girl Amanda Lemur Ortiz, is recovering from the third surgery in Spain. The little girl shows encouraging signs, while her parents seek support from the Cuban community abroad to cope with the long months of hospitalization that await them.
Once again, Amanda's strength has been tested in the operating rooms of Spain. The little girl underwent surgery this Monday morning.
It was a moment of anguish for his family, but also another episode in this story of resistance and hope. The activist Yamilka Lafita, better known as Lara Crofs, reported that the procedure was aimed at removing clots that originated after the previous intervention.
The operation was brief and successful. Despite the complexity of her conditions, Amanda continues to surprise followers of this case. The girl is in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), defying sedation with her inexhaustible energy.
His vital signs show a stable hemoglobin of 12 and so far, no post-operative bleeding has been reported. However, the road to full recovery will be long and arduous.
While doctors take care of your health, an additional challenge falls on you. Amanda's parents. The hospital covers the girl's expenses, but not the stay of mom and dad in a foreign country, without resources to support themselves during the months required by hospital admission.
The Amanda's family, has been driven to reactivate the fundraising campaign in GoFundMe. Solidarity becomes crucial to alleviate the weight of this battle that they are facing with admirable fortitude.
Emmanuel, the father, recovers from the organ donation surgery for the little girl, while Mila Ortiz, the mother, assumes day-to-day life in the ICU, trusting in a future where her little girl can survive.
Before her most recent challenge, Amanda required several blood transfusions. Saturday night was marked by constant monitoring due to bleeding he was suffering.
Medical efforts focused on stabilizing his condition, a job that requires not only skill but also compassion and dedication.
Amanda's story touches the souls of thousands of Cubans on and off the island, and remembers the importance of humanitarian aid for the community in exile.
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