More than just bad luck may have caused a Spanish nurse to contract Ebola from an infected patient earlier this week. In recent years, Madrid’s Carlos III hospital has been plagued by budget cuts and under-staffing brought on by European austerity, according to local press.
“It’s not the hospital it used to be,” Amelia Batanero, a spokesperson for the Independent Health Workers Union, told English-language news site The Local in early August. Thanks to cuts, the hospital has reportedly had entire floors shuttered for the past couple of years.
Spanish health authorities have determined that “substandard equipment and a failure to follow protocol” were to blame for the breach of quarantine, according to The Guardian.
While countries across the European Union have spent the past few years implementing austerity cuts, Spain has had to impose harsher cuts than most. In exchange for stimulus from the European Central Bank, the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund, the Spanish government has had to make steep cuts to public employment and the social safety net.
Photo essay: Ebola continues its deadly march









