Stories From the Field

Giving birth under a bridge during a hurricane in Honduras

A pregnant woman receives care at a shelter in the aftermath of two devastating storms in Honduras. © UNFPA Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras – Fabiola Ulloa, 23, gave birth under the bridge where she had taken shelter from a raging hurricane. Six months later, she is still there, with her new baby, partner, and 3-year-old son, living in a tent beside the road. 

“My sister and I were both pregnant during the storm,” Ms. Ulloa told UNFPA Honduras in an interview from the nylon tent she’s been living in since the hurricane. “That night was very sad. I didn’t get a chance to get my things out because I had to take care of my mom, my sister, and my child.”

UNFPA has been providing care in the aftermath of Hurricane Eta tore through Honduras at the start of November 2020. The storm devastated Ms. Ulloa’s neighborhood in Playita, in the city San Pedro Sula. Her family, like many others, lost everything.

A doctor wearing a UNFPA vest checks up on an infant, who is lying on an air mattress inside a tent.
A UNFPA doctor looks at Joshua Enmanuel in the tent where Ms. Ullalo and her family live. © UNFPA Honduras

They crowded into a tent under a concrete bridge, alongside other families. There, they weathered a second hurricane, Iota, which struck two weeks after Eta.

Only days later, Ms. Ulloa went into labor. “I thought my son would be born in January but on 24 November, I started having some pain.”

Ambulances were unable to reach her. But, the neighborhood midwife, who had delivered all the babies in her family, was summoned. “At 9 am I was delivering my child here inside of this tent,” Ms. Ulloa said.

Hurricanes and homelessness amid the pandemic

Those two deadly storms affected millions of people throughout the country, and many, like Ms. Ulloa, have not yet recovered. 

Today, food security is a major concern, humanitarian groups report, as is the COVID-19 pandemic.

Access to health services was severely disrupted in the aftermath of the storms – more than 400 health facilities were damaged, including 120 that were rendered fully inoperable. Even now, many women and girls are refraining from seeking essential health services out of fear of exposure to COVID-19.

This is one of the reasons Ms. Ullao and her infant son, Joshua Enmanuel, have not sought out care at a health facility. “I didn’t need to go to any hospital,” she told UNFPA. “I didn’t want the ambulance because when I needed it they didn’t come to save me.” 

Her newborn has received care from UNFPA, however. “The only doctor who has come is the UNFPA doctor, who came to check the child at two weeks old,” she said. She was able to access additional post-partum care and newborn services at the Chamelecón health center, which has been supported with training by UNFPA. 

Women carry their children through ankle-deep flood water.
Families evacuate amid flooding in the aftermath of the November hurricanes. Months later, many communities have not yet recovered. © UNFPA Honduras

Women and girls especially vulnerable

The storms directly affected around 24,000 pregnant women. Still, health services in the worst-hit areas remain interrupted. For example, in the department of Cortés, most health facilities remain closed due to damage, health personnel injuries, and blocked roadways. 

UNFPA is working with partner organizations and the government to restore access to life-saving health services, particularly for women in need of prenatal, safe delivery and post-partum care. Together with the Pan American Health Organization, UNFPA is targeting more than half a million people throughout the country with health services; as of late March, UNFPA Honduras had reached about a quarter of a million people with hurricane relief. 

The safety of vulnerable women and girls also remains a chief concern. In the aftermath of disasters, vulnerability to sexual exploitation and abuse can greatly amid the displacement and disrupted protection systems. 

Emergency services report receiving nearly 13,000 calls in the early months of 2021. There were also 33 femicides, according to recent reports. 

Finding a way to survive

Families are assisted by humanitarian workers using a helicopter.
The back-to-back hurricanes have long since passed, and the acute phase of the emergency response (pictured) has largely passed. But support is still needed. © UNFPA Honduras

Since November, the challenges have been extraordinary, storm survivors are reporting.

“This is the second time that I have lost my home due to the floods and it is very difficult for me, in addition to raising seven children as a single mother, to face this double tragedy,” said Gabriela at a shelter in Las Brisas in February. 

“We need food because there’s no kitchen,” Ms. Ulloa said. “We can’t cook so we have to buy ready-made meals. And also there are a lot of mosquitoes.” The children and families are also at risk along the road. “We are exposed to car accidents,” she said. 

Still, she and other survivors wish to reclaim their lives and futures. 

“We lost everything. There is a lot of hopelessness,” said Karlibeth Ortega, a young women’s advocate in La Lima, in Cortés. “But we still have to move on and find a way to survive.”

UNFPA.org originally published a version of this story.

Dana Kirkegaard
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