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A Rural Guatemala Hospital Provides Lifesaving Care to 100,000 Maya People. They’re Still Expanding.

Staff at Hospitalito Atitlán prevent maternal deaths, provide specialty surgery, and offer primary care at local clinics, supported by more than $7 million in aid from Direct Relief.

News

Guatemala

A smiling man crouches in a white shirt and blue jeans, pumping his fist in the air. A little girl sits in a wheelchair to his left, holding a pink stuffed rabbit. A white hospital bed is next to them, and they are surrounded by white, yellow, and red balloons.
“Having a hospital like this hospital, in this region of Guatemala, is a blessing," said Dr. Manuel González, Hospitalito Atitlán's executive director.

About three months ago, a woman in labor arrived at Hospitalito Atitlán, in rural Guatemala, with life-threatening complications. Her baby hadn’t yet been delivered.

The obstetrician on staff brought the woman immediately to an operating room for a C-section. In the theater, it became clear that the patient was still in acute danger from hemorrhage and needed further surgery.

“For that case, we had to use all the blood units we had,” Dr. Manuel González, the hospital’s executive director, told Direct Relief through a translator.

Both mother and baby were saved.

Safeguarding these lives means expanding to meet patient needs. In recent years, Hospitalito Atitlán has built out the infrastructure to house a formal blood bank – they’re currently in the process of applying for a license – increase its surgical and specialty capacities, and support emergency response in the area.

Hospitalito Atitlán provides free care for about 100,000 patients, almost all of whom are members of Tz’utujil, Kaqchikel, K’iche, and other Maya communities in the area. Patients receive everything from primary care, vaccinations, and chronic disease management at local clinics to highly specialized surgery at the hospital in Santiago Atitlán.

A young woman in a gray sweatshirt and pink shirt smiles while holding a newborn infant in a blue blanket, white and pink outfit, and white and green cap.  They are in a green medical room and the woman has medical tape securing an IV catheter on her arm.
Complex maternal cases are often transferred to Hospitalito Atitlán. Despite the challenges, the hospital has had no maternal deaths for the past two years. (Courtesy photo)

For patients with complex emergencies or who need specialized treatment, the only other option would be to travel to Guatemala City, hours away and often over rough roads. In many cases, it’s too long a journey to be made safely.

“If this case would have happened two years ago, we wouldn’t have been able to save them,” Dr. González said of that mother and baby.

Much of this expansion was made possible by Hospitalito Atitlán’s longstanding partnership with Direct Relief, Dr. González explained.

Since 2012, Direct Relief has shipped $7.7 million in material medical aid to Hospitalito Atitlán, including medical refrigerators that have enabled the hospital staff to store medicine and apply for blood bank licensing. (Currently, the hospital can store blood for surgeries, emergency treatments, and other medical needs. Blood banking, which involves collecting, testing, and categorizing blood, requires a specific licensing process, and will grow capacity and community impact.) Donations of medicines and supplies support primary care, specialty medicine, and surgeries.

And a grant made it possible for the hospital to install a medical oxygen plant that pipes directly to operating theaters and patients’ bedsides.“Direct Relief is our ace in the hole,” Dr. González said. “We have more and more patients each year. We see a wider range of illnesses…The need is there, and it’s greater than we can meet.”

Expanding Services

One of the most urgent needs among local patient communities is preventing maternal deaths, Dr. González told Direct Relief.

About two and a half years ago, within a few weeks of becoming executive director, he witnessed a mother in labor, transferred to the hospital, and severely hemorrhaging, die at the hospital.

“Most of these cases, when they arrive to us, are already complicated cases,” Dr. González explained. Most births in the area still occur at home, often under the care of traditional attendants without formal medical training. In about 10% of the cases Hospitalito Atitlán providers treated, women were hemorrhaging profusely by the time they were transferred to the hospital.

“For those cases, you need a lot of blood,” he said. Having a blood bank on the premises, as well as more sophisticated equipment and finely honed protocols, was a cherished goal.

Four people in blue surgical gowns, masks, and kerchiefs over their heads stand around a body covered in surgical drapes in a medical room. One man standing next to a body holds a scalpel, while another, on the other side of the body, works over an incision.
Hospitalito Atitlán surgeons carried out 896 surgeries last year, supported by medical refrigerators from Direct Relief, used to safely store blood for transfusion. Courtesy photo)

But these efforts have paid off. Despite receiving many of these complicated cases in each year – 190 in 2025, 114 in 2024 – Hospitalito Atitlán has had no maternal deaths for the past two years.

It isn’t just maternal deaths, though. Having sophisticated operating theaters and equipment makes it possible for surgeons to both respond to complex emergencies and conduct scheduled surgeries throughout the year – 896 in total last year. The hospital also hosts traveling tertiary surgeons – a team of highly specialized hand surgeons recently spent several days at the hospital, treating local patients.

Hospitalito Atitlán now has a wide range of specialty providers on staff – from general surgery to gastroenterology to ophthalmology. Because many patients speak an Indigenous language, not Spanish, 90% of staff speak one of these languages.

“We are able to bring [patients] good quality healthcare in their local language,” Dr. González noted. “It’s good for them, and more comfortable for them, to receive care in their own language.”

Local Work, Bigger Impact

Local hospitals like Hospitalito Atitlán are an important contributor to the goals of Guatemala’s 1996 Peace Accords, which aimed to make healthcare more widely accessible to rural and Indigenous communities, the executive director explained.

A little girl in a green hospital gown lies in a hospital bed, with a woman stroking her forehead. Her entire left leg is in a cast, and a physician in a white coat and medical worker in blue scrubs are holding and working on her leg.
Hospitalito Atitlán’s staff offer emergency treatment to a patient population of 100,000 across their area of Guatemala. (Courtesy photo)

Erick Molina, Direct Relief’s regional director for Latin America and the Caribbean, said hospitals like this one are an essential component of expanding access to healthcare across the region.

“A partner like Hospitalito Atitlán is vital for various reasons,” he explained. “The healthcare services they provide are indispensable to patients south of Lake Atitlán, bringing essential healthcare services outside large urban centers.”

This kind of work can’t be done in solitude, Dr. González cautioned. The hospital works with donor partners like Direct Relief, as well as local health centers and emergency responders like firefighters. Being able to supply local emergency response with high-quality medical oxygen – the plant funded by Direct Relief produces more than the hospital currently needs – is a point of pride.

“Having a hospital like this hospital, in this region of Guatemala, is a blessing,” Dr. González said. “Many places in Guatemala don’t have something like this.”

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