Home WebMail
| Calgary -1.8°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • Breaking
  • Latest
  • Featured
  • Live
  • LIVE
  • Rescuers search for survivors after strikes hit homes in Iran
  • North Korea keeping Iran at arm’s length, reports Seoul
  • Hegseth says strikes on Iran increasing as Hormuz deadline looms
  • Video: Iran’s top university hit in US-Israeli strikes
  • Artemis II breaks record for farthest human travel from Earth
  • Democrats blast Trump for Iran ‘war crimes’ threat; Republicans supportive
  • How Asia became ground zero for the oil crisis
  • Cairo faces darker nights as global energy prices continue to soar
  • Trump warns deadline ‘final’ as Iran pushes proposal to end war
  • Trump praised airman’s rescue in Iran during White House Easter event
  • Libya’s oil disputes mirror Hormuz crisis, fuel European energy fears
  • Gaza camp offers children a sense of safety
  • Israeli army fire on WHO vehicle in southern Gaza kills one, medics report
  • Gaza grandmother loses her family due to Israeli attacks
  • Where are Iran’s power plants that Trump has threatened to destroy?
  • Ukraine strikes Russian Black Sea energy hub Novorossiysk
  • In maps and photos: Five Iranian civilian bridges at risk of US strikes
  • The US could still try to play the ethnic card in Iran
  • Jobless young Palestinians trapped as Israel holds Gaza’s economy hostage
  • ‘Smell’ of war comes to St Petersburg as Ukraine hammers Russian refineries
  • How US operation to rescue air officer from Iran unfolded
  • Has Trump confirmed Iran’s claim that protesters were US-armed?
  • Iran threatens Bab al-Mandeb closure: How would that affect world trade?
  • Pakistan offers ‘two-phased’ truce deal to end US-Israel war on Iran
  • Trump’s ‘Bridge Day’ threat: Can a last-ditch ceasefire plan work?
  • Rescuers search for survivors after strikes hit homes in Iran
  • North Korea keeping Iran at arm’s length, reports Seoul
  • Hegseth says strikes on Iran increasing as Hormuz deadline looms
  • Video: Iran’s top university hit in US-Israeli strikes
  • Artemis II breaks record for farthest human travel from Earth
  • Democrats blast Trump for Iran ‘war crimes’ threat; Republicans supportive
  • How Asia became ground zero for the oil crisis
  • Cairo faces darker nights as global energy prices continue to soar
  • Trump warns deadline ‘final’ as Iran pushes proposal to end war
  • Trump praised airman’s rescue in Iran during White House Easter event
  • Libya’s oil disputes mirror Hormuz crisis, fuel European energy fears
  • Gaza camp offers children a sense of safety
  • Israeli army fire on WHO vehicle in southern Gaza kills one, medics report
  • Gaza grandmother loses her family due to Israeli attacks
  • Where are Iran’s power plants that Trump has threatened to destroy?
  • Ukraine strikes Russian Black Sea energy hub Novorossiysk
  • In maps and photos: Five Iranian civilian bridges at risk of US strikes
  • The US could still try to play the ethnic card in Iran
  • Jobless young Palestinians trapped as Israel holds Gaza’s economy hostage
  • ‘Smell’ of war comes to St Petersburg as Ukraine hammers Russian refineries
  • How US operation to rescue air officer from Iran unfolded
  • Has Trump confirmed Iran’s claim that protesters were US-armed?
  • Iran threatens Bab al-Mandeb closure: How would that affect world trade?
  • Pakistan offers ‘two-phased’ truce deal to end US-Israel war on Iran
  • Trump’s ‘Bridge Day’ threat: Can a last-ditch ceasefire plan work?
Photos: Travelling doctor takes healthcare to Argentina’s remote areas

Photos: Travelling doctor takes healthcare to Argentina’s remote areas

Few outsiders reach Cerro Chani, which has extreme temperatures, and no schools or other essential services.

By Al Jazeera Published 2024-11-28 04:36 Updated 2024-11-28 04:36 3 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Health

A rural doctor travels miles of unforgiving terrain by donkey, enduring cold, rain, wind and exhaustion, to visit several dozen families scattered across the highest mountain in the north of Argentina.

Dr Jorge Fusaro has organised medical tours three times a year for the past four years across Cerro Chani in Jujuy. Chani is considered a sacred mountain by the Indigenous Kolla people who live there. It has extreme temperatures and year-round snowy peaks, and is home to animals full of symbolism, like the puma and condor.

Fusaro is not only the only doctor many people see, sometimes he is the only outsider.

Doctors may be the only representatives of the state to reach this mountainous region. There are no schools, police or postal services. Fusaro not only treats residents and leaves enough medicine for their first-aid kits, he also helps them with bureaucratic paperwork, serves as a mail carrier for delivering important documents to relatives in the city, and organises training sessions, among other tasks.

“Knowing that our medical work gave these communities a better life fills my heart. If we don’t go, no one will,” says the 38-year-old doctor. He’s worried that government cuts will make future trips impossible. He’s already had to cancel one trip due to lack of funding.

For some people, his arrival is the first time they’ve seen a doctor. They are surprised that he keeps coming back.

It’s almost noon, and the sun blazes down at nearly 3,600m (11,800 feet) above sea level in Ovejeria, a settlement where only 67-year-old Dona Virginia Cari, her husband Eustaquio Balderrama, and their son Panchito remain.

In a kitchen with a thatched roof, Fusaro chops onions and peels potatoes to help Virginia prepare lunch. He asks her about her daily chores, her animals, her husband’s health, the weather, her children living far away, and her medicinal plants.

“My idea of sharing is essential. Making the most of the short time we spend in the communities and trying to live as they do; if we need to chop wood or walk for hours to fetch water, we do it,” he said.

“That way, we understand their efforts and worries, their knee or back pain. If they don’t have a bed and we need to sleep on a sheep’s hide, we do it; if they only have soup at night, we drink soup. This helps us think of medical solutions within their possibilities and daily lives.”

Virginia says it’s important for her and her family to see this rural doctor a few times a year.

“I’m very happy when I see the doctor arrive on his mule. He brings the medicines we take here for months,” she said. “The work with animals is hard; we’re old, and our bodies ache.”

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Network

  • WestNet News
  • Advertise With Us
  • RSS Feed
  • Atom Feed

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics
  • Editorial Policies
  • Corrections Policy

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube
  • Twitch
  • WhatsApp
  • Submit a News Tip
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2026 WestNet-HD, A Division of WN Continental Broadcasting. All Rights Reserved.

Action News™ and WestNet News are registered trademarks of WN Continental Broadcasting in the United States and Canada. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Home Breaking Canada Sports Search
🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute