Amid lack of services, this organization is supporting cancer patients in Vieques
The story was originally published in 9 Millones with support from our 2023 Impact Fund for Reporting on Health Equity and Health Systems.
VIEQUES, PR — The sun was setting above the Esperanza neighborhood in Vieques when Zaida Torres Rodríguez was kneading 12 pounds of flour with vegetable oil, water and salt. It was the day before the Vieques Arepa Festival, a celebration held on this island municipality of Puerto Rico since 2014. “Gratitude comes in many forms,” was how she summarized the act of creating arepa dough for frying: this is her way of giving back to cancer patients on her island.
But the festival is more than just a cultural event —it is a fundraiser for Vieques en Rescate (VER), an organization that, for 11 years, has offered financial and emotional support to cancer patients from the town also known as Isla Nena. If anything, the festival is a “party for the patients, survivors and their caregivers,” noted Torres Rodríguez.
Photo: Lymarie Rodríguez
The 69-year-old great-grandmother has dedicated her life to improving the health of her community, be it working as a nurse, volunteer or activist. But what began as a calling towards others is now a personal matter: multiple of her family members have had cancer, and now she is battling it herself.
Vieques and its neighboring island, Culebra, have the highest age-adjusted cancer mortality rate in Puerto Rico, according to data from 2000 to 2021 from the Puerto Rico Central Cancer Registry. In Vieques, an average of 17 people died each year, which translates to a mortality rate of 127 per 100,000 residents, whereas in Culebra, an average of 3 people died each year, which translates to a rate of 132.
Although the incidence rate in these municipalities is not the highest in the entire archipelago, access to specialized medical services remains a sea’s distance away, forcing patients to take a ferry to receive treatments such as chemotherapy.
Design: Charlotte Danois
VER addresses this need by hiring a driver who accompanies patients on the ferry ride and drives them to the hospitals on Puerto Rico’s main island, Isla Grande. The Arepa Festival helps the organization fund transportation costs. This past year, its board and volunteers raised $39,332, which represents a little more than half of its annual budget.
The origins of the festival date back to 2003, before the founding of VER, when a group of Viequenses, mostly leaders of the Viequenses Women’s Alliance, organized a Relay for Life, an event that raises money for the American Cancer Society. “We would do the activity without having a track to walk on; we would do it at Sun Bay [Beach],” Torres Rodriguez explained. The money they raised was then donated to the American Cancer Society. For the eleventh edition of the event, the organizing assembly decided to found a local entity so that all the funds would stay in Vieques.
We know the needs of cancer patients firsthand; people can come and [at] that very moment receive help. Hilda Bonilla Rodríguez, parliamentary advisor of VER's Board of Directors.