Originally Posted by HM2Viking
Misleading.
Maybe fewer babies die in Cuba compared to other Latin American countries, but the sickest of the sick babies have a much better chance of survival in the US. And the last thing you can expect from Castro is honesty when it comes to reporting neonatal mortality.
Additionally, when freedom and a more democratic capitalistic society eventually takes root in Cuba (and someday it will), we'll see what happens to their numbers.
And if Cuba is a healthcare utopia, I wonder why tens of thousands of them take unhealthy risks every year to escape to the US.
http://www.canf.org/Issues/medicalapartheid.htm
Summary; smaller health-care budget than Jamaica. JAMAICA!! Cuba has a two-tiered system, denying services to the unprivileged. The embargo does not include medical supplies; US companies are free to sell medical supplies to Cuba. And the US is the biggest provider of humanitarian aid to Cuba, and it is believed the single-largest source of medications used by Cuban citizens is the MILLIONS of dollars worth of medicine send from Americans to relatives in Cuba.
So I ask; take away the outside support injected into this complete failure at self-sufficiency, and I'd like to know how much worse off the average Cuban citizen would be.
Excerpts; "The founder of Havana's International Center for Neurological Restoration, Dr. Hilda Molina, in 1994 quit her position after refusing to increase the number of neural transplant operations without the required testing and follow-up. She expressed outrage that only foreigners are treated. Dr. Molina resigned from her seat in the national legislature, and returned the medals Fidel Castro had bestowed on her for her work."
My favorite:
"A group of Cuban doctors recently arrived in the United States said they were "mystified" by claims in a recent report of the American Association for World Health (AAWH) that the United States embargo is to be blamed for the public health situation in the country.
According to these doctors, "we . . . can categorically and authoritatively state that our people's poor health care situation results from a dysfunctional and inhumane economic and political system, exacerbated by the regime to divert scarce resources to meet the needs of the regime's elite and foreign patients who bring hard currency."
Referring to the growing disparity between health care provided to ordinary Cubans and that offered to tourists and high ranking Communist party members, the exiled Cuban doctors noted that they "wish that any one of us could provide tours to foreign visitors of the hospitals Cira Garcia, Frank Pais, CIMEQ, and Hermanos Ameijeiras, in order to point out the medicines and equipment, even the bedsheets and blankets, reserved for regime elites or dollar-bearing foreigners, to the detriment of our people, who must bring their own bedsheets, to say nothing of the availability of medicines."