CARACAS, Venezuela — The most dreaded part of Sister Emilia Rivero’s day comes each morning.
When she opens the door to the nursing home she runs in downtown Caracas, she almost always finds six to eight senior citizens, sometimes with their families, waiting outside, hoping she has space. Rivero usually must turn them away.
“We can’t take in anybody else because of the food situation. We have to give them three meals a day, and we can’t,” she said.
As Venezuela’s unprecedented economic crisis drags on for a fifth year, the four sisters from the Hermanitas de los Pobres de Maiquetia congregation who run the Providence Asylum nursing home face a heartbreaking dilemma: Record demand, but record-low resources.
A few years ago, the sisters started gradually reducing the number of new residents accepted. While the space could house up to 100 seniors, today the sisters only have enough food and money to take care of 45.
“Once we get enough food for them all, then we have to worry about their medicines,” said Rivero.
Venezuela continues to endure what most consider the worst economic crisis of its history, sparked by a drop in oil prices and years of mismanagement and corruption. The minimum wage now equates to just a few dollars per month. Many economists now believe the country, already boasting the world’s highest inflation, has entered hyperinflation. Prices double roughly every month.
The economy’s downward spiral has led to an exodus of Venezuelans seeking better conditions. Neighboring Brazil and Colombia report hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan refugees have fled to their countries in the past two years.
The spike in demand at the nursing home has been driven by families planning to leave the country who cannot take older relatives with them, and in other cases by senior citizens whose pensions have dried up amid hyperinflation.
Jose Raul Olivares, 78, who arrived a year ago, used to live with his two sons and granddaughter. He hasn’t heard from them in six months and suspects they fled to Colombia or Brazil. Living with diabetes and “several other things,” Olivares mostly stays in bed.
“The sisters and other folks here have become a new family for me,” he said.
Sister Margarita Gomez, 80, has spent almost all her 60 years as a sister taking care of seniors, but can’t remember another time seeing so many seniors abandoned.
Gomez speculates that, faced with food and medicine shortages and likely planning to emigrate, Olivares’ family could not afford his care.
“It’s sad, seeing so many older folks abandoned,” she said. “They leave them here and forget about them.”
The same crisis that has forced many families to leave loved ones behind has dried up donations for the sisters, with Rivero estimating donations have fallen by 50 percent in two years.
While staying at the home is free, residents generally help with costs if possible. But most can only afford to contribute the equivalent of just 80 cents per month, and a whole chicken costs $15 at official exchange rates. So the sisters now serve chicken only once a week.
“Everything else has to be rice, mixed with seasoning, or pasta,” Rivero said. “They should be getting more meat and protein.”
Using a popular Venezuelan expression, Rivero said they now have to pool money together “like a hen would, grain by grain.”
Others arriving at the nursing home have been found homeless after they could no longer afford rent or were left on the street by their families.
“Sometimes firefighters or police officers will find them sleeping under a bridge,” Rivero said.
In the most extreme cases of abandonment, the sisters will make an exception and accept new residents.
Due to a byzantine system of price controls, traditional grocery stores and pharmacies commonly run short of basic food products and medicines. Food products can be found easily at markets selling them at black market prices, but acquiring certain medicines can be trickier. The sisters struggle to find antibiotics and other medicines for chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes.
“We will spend hours calling pharmacies and going from pharmacy to pharmacy with no luck,” Rivero said.
Those who need medical attention, like 70-year-old Jorge Guevara, often face even more hurdles. He arrived at the home with a bulging, painful mass on his leg. At the local hospital, the X-ray machine is damaged, meaning he could not receive a diagnosis. The hospital cannot import the parts to repair it or afford to buy a new machine.
Sister Matilde Morales, in charge of the home’s medical care, often has to improvise.
“We have him on painkillers for now,” she said, referring to Guevara. “We hope to get a diagnosis and treatment when an X-ray machine becomes available.”
As she spoke, Morales cleaned medical equipment using a bucket of water instead of the spigot. For many in Caracas, including the sisters, running water is only available a few days a week because of the country’s deteriorating infrastructure.
Aside from the four sisters, the home employs a handful of workers to help serve meals, and otherwise relies on volunteers and donations from companies or individuals.
Volunteer Neri Rincones visits the residents weekly to give haircuts.
“I come here to serve God, as a faithful Catholic,” she said.
Other groups, including local Catholic and community organizations, still stop by regularly to help with money and food. Recently a national guard group donated 22 leftover arepas, or traditional Venezuelan corn cakes.
Rivero worries that those small donations will only continue to disappear as the country’s crisis continues.
“And if that happens, it means we’ll have even more people at our door each morning, who we’ll have to turn away,” she said.
Weddle is a freelance journalist in Caracas. This is an edited version of a story originally published in Global Sisters Report, a project of National Catholic Reporter.