What We Can learn From Cuba
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 02:25pm (GMT)
I decided to do some research on Cuba's healthcare system. as we
excitedly wait for film maker Michael Moore's new masterpiece,"Sicko,"
"Sicko" spotlights the negligent U.S. healthcare system. In a brilliant
example of contrast, Moore takes 911 fire fighters and rescue workers
with life threatening lung problems their health insurance policies
refused to cover, first to the U.S. Post Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, where
care was refused; then to Havana, where the doctors there happily
treated them.
50,000 people are without healthcare insurance in the United States.
Many of those who are insured are under insured. The job of the
insurance companies is to deny claims and services to their clients,
whether they admit it, or not.
According to Health Care Now, the U.S. ranked 58 in the provision of
healthcare worldwide. More than 50% of American bankruptcies are the
result of inability to pay for medical emergencies.
The United States has aggressively attempted and consistently failed to
destroy the communist government of Fidel Castro, most recently through
an ongoing blockade of goods and services into that country.
Due to the pressure the U.S. has exerted on other countries to stop
their trade with Cuba, Cuba has been forced to request higher prices
for goods and services, including medicine. In one year, Cuba had to
pay an extra 45 million dollars for pharmaceuticals, which is 80% to
140% more than other buyers of medicine, according to Medi-Cuba, the
Cuban firm that imports medicine and human technology.
Nevertheless, Cuba continues to offer free and comprehensive healthcare to all her citizens.
In addition, since 1963, Cuba has exported its exemplary healthcare
service around the world, sending doctors and its own technological
advancements in medicine to countries throughout Latin America and
Africa.
Cuba provided much needed medical support after the 2005 earthquake in
Kashmir, Pakistan. Fidel Castro offered to lend medical support after
the devastation following Hurricane Katrina. Medical Personnel were
packed and ready to go.
Unfortunately, the U.S. chose to play politics over the saving of lives.
EXPORTING HEALTHCARE
Cuba trains international students at its medical schools. After
Hurricane George and Mitch plummeted Central America and the Caribbean,
Cuban Doctors rushed to the disaster zone, as was their practice for
similar acts of Mother Nature.
When it was time to go back to Cuba, the team of doctors saw a need for
posting doctors in several of these countries in order to train local
people in medicine.
Thus the Havana-based Latin American School of Medicine or ELAM, was
born, offering $10,000 scholarships for free medical training.
The Program has grown to 22,000 students from Latin America, the
Caribbean, Africa, Asia and the United States. The students attend ELAM
and 28 other medical schools across Cuba. The students represent all
ethnic groups, 51% are women, and they come from 30 countries.
A young person from inner city Bronx who chooses to take part in this
program, forinstance, must promise to take her expertise back to the
neighborhood she came from.
350,000 people now work in the healthcare field in Cuba, serving a
population of 11 million people. Everyone has access to doctors,
nurses, specialists and medicines. A doctor and nurse team oversees
every neighborhood.
House calls are routine. The wisdom of treating a patient holistically,
knowing a patient's family and her environment, is crucial to
successful treatment.
Doctors and nurses in Cuba are trained in acupuncture, herbal
treatments, massage and other natural health modalities, as well,
something lacking in American healthcare.
The exportation of Cuban healthcare is a Peace Project that we all can learn from.
Before Cuba sent doctors to Pakistan, relations between these two
countries were not harmonious. But now, the relationship is
"magnificent," says Dr Ceballos, a Cuban physician.
The investments in healthcare missions "are resources that prevent
confrontation with other nations," Dr Ceballos explains. "The
solidarity with Cuba has restrained aggressions of all kinds."
And in a statement that acknowledges Cuba's vulnerabilities on the
global stage, Dr. Ceballos explains, "It's infinitely better to invest
in peace than to invest in war."
A SINGLE PAYOR PLAN IN PENNSYLVANIA
"Family and Business Healthcare Security Act of 2007" is a single payor
healthcare plan currently being set forth in the state of Pennsylvania
where I live. It may prove to be the prototype healthcare plan for
every state in the union.
Michael Moore's "Sicko" has opened the debate. Now we must get active and change the world.
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