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COCAINE

Spain: leader in cocaine use and organ donations

Online comic and website DogHouse Diaries have put together a world map which highlights rather humorously what each country leads the world in.

Spain: leader in cocaine use and organ donations
The DogHouse Diaires map has since updated Spain’s claim to fame as being top for organ transplants, a considerably more positive point than being the world’s biggest cocaine snorters.

The fact that Spain is a nation of hedonists is no secret, but to many outsiders the extent to which many Spaniards are willing to pursue these guilty pleasures is relatively unknown.

Spain is the European country where cocaine is most widely consumed, the UN’s International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) announced in 2011.

More than three percent of Spaniards aged between 15 and 64 snort the white powder, compared to 2.4 percent of Brits and 2.2 percent of Italians.

"It's easier to get cocaine than to get a library card," Gustavo Rodriguez, a 31-year-old business student, told the LA Times in April.

Spain remains the main gateway into Europe for cocaine and hashish even though drug busts are now an almost daily occurrence.

The Map

DogHouse Diaries’ map is based on statistics gathered from official sources such as the UN, the World Bank and Guinness World Records.

Swedes lead the way for atheism, Germans for almost winning the Football World Cup and Romanians for having the fastest Internet connexions. 

In the British Isles, Ireland’s number one position for quality of life is in stark contrast to the UK’s label as a leader for fascist movements.

Outside Europe, Mongolia is a world leader in velociraptor bones, Venezuela in Miss Universe champions and Niger for making babies.

DogHouse Diaries’ map has since updated Spain’s claim to fame as being top for organ transplants, a considerably more positive point than being the world’s biggest cocaine snorters. 

Spain has the highest organ donation rate in the world with 35.1 effective donors per million people.

Check out DogHouse Diaries' full global map here.

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ORGAN TRANSPLANT

‘If I’m not careful, it’ll end badly’: Covid fears haunt Spain’s transplant patients despite vaccines

Wearing a face mask and social distancing were a part of Magdalena Moskal's immunosuppressed life, long before the coronavirus pandemic hit.

'If I'm not careful, it'll end badly': Covid fears haunt Spain's transplant patients despite vaccines
Photo: PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU / AFP

The 36-year-old Madrid resident had a double lung transplant in 2008 to tackle her cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder in which thick secretions build up in the lungs, making it difficult to breathe.

“Suddenly everyone was living my reality,” she said in a soft voice, looking back on the rush to adopt anti-Covid precautions early last year.

Now, as Covid vaccine rollouts gain momentum, many people are returning to gyms, cinemas and sports venues after more than a year of on-off restrictions.

But for Moskal and thousands like her in Spain, the world leader in organ transplants, a worry-free return to normal life still feels a long way off.

Transplant patients’ immune response is suppressed on purpose with daily medication to prevent the body attacking the new organ.

They also do not respond to vaccines in the same way as other people.

So, warned Moskal, organ donation recipients will only be able to relax when “100 percent of the population is vaccinated”.

“If I am here, it is because I have always taken care of myself. If I am not careful, it will end badly,” Moskal, who trained in the law and has been happy to work at home, told AFP.

‘Not like others’

Twenty-five year-old Andrea López Robles, a student who lives in the Spanish capital too and received a life-saving liver transplant when she was just two, also feels she cannot let down her guard.

“Until everyone is vaccinated, I don’t think I can say ‘goodbye’ to all the precautions,” she said in an interview with AFP.

Andrea López Robles received a life-saving liver transplant when she was just two years old. Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP

READ ALSO: Pandemic forces Spain’s hospitals to cancel 570,000 surgeries

She has not taken public transport since the start of the pandemic in Spain in March 2020 and avoids large gatherings as much as possible.

“I almost died. I can’t do anything stupid,” Robles added, hand sanitiser attached to her handbag and only lowering her high-filtration FFP2 face mask to drink her fruit juice.

“I am aware that I have to take care of myself, that I am not like others.”

Uncertainty, despite vaccination

For more than three decades, Spain has been carrying out more organ transplants than anywhere else in the world.

It has a highly developed network, with a transplant coordinator present in every hospital.

Over 116,000 transplants have been carried out since 1989, in what is a source of national pride.

There were 48.9 organ donors per million inhabitants in Spain in 2019, its highest number ever.

That compared to 29.4 million in France and 36.1 million in the United States, according to the Spanish health ministry’s National Transplant Organisation.

However, organ transplant patients who have been vaccinated against Covid-19 cannot be certain of their immunity.

A study published in May by the Journal of the American Medical Association found that only 54 percent of 658 transplant patients who received two doses of either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine produced Covid-19 antibodies.

Moskal was immunised against Covid in May but does not know if her body has produced the antibodies that vaccines are meant to trigger.

“A significant percentage of transplant patients develop absolutely no antibodies or defensive cells after being vaccinated against the coronavirus,” said Estela Paz Artal, head of the immunology department at Madrid’s Hospital 12 de Octubre.

But she said that it was important for a transplant patient to get vaccinated because “however weak” their immune response is, this is “preferable to no vaccination”.

The Covid-19 mortality rate for transplant patients stands at 21 percent, compared to around 2.0 percent for the general population, the National Transplant Organisation says.

‘Monastic life’

Most transplant patients are well aware of the risks.

Retired IT engineer Rafael Garcia (pictured below), 45, said the roughly 100 pills that he must take daily since having a double lung transplant five years ago remind him he has to take care of himself “every day, every hour”.

Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP

He said he leads a “monastic life” with his wife, living as if he were not vaccinated, although he has been.

He buys groceries online and wears face masks outside even if nobody is nearby.

Under Spain’s Covid vaccination programme, transplant patients were given priority and health authorities are mulling giving them booster shots.

“We will have to look for alternatives and increase the effectiveness of the vaccine for this group of patients,” said National Transplant Organisation head, Beatriz Dominguez-Gil.

“For the time being, they must maintain self-protection measures. Like everyone else, but in their case even more,” she added.

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