Reprinted from NewsMax.com
Socialized Medicine in Cuba 2002 (Part I): A Poor
State of Health!
Miguel A. Faria Jr., M.D.
Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2002
NewsMax.com
Those who yearn for a more "egalitarian" and "equitable" system of
medical care "like the one in Cuba" are not familiar with the
extraordinary saga of Cuban physician Dr. Dessy Mendoza Rivero. But they
should be! "¡Dengue! La Epidemia Secreta de Fidel Castro," the title
of his book, is one they should read. But they won't!
For one thing, most of the admirers of Cuba's Revolution and her
socialized system of medical care don't speak or read Spanish and only
know the system from afar either looking down from above in the ivory
towers of academia, where Marxism is still in vogue, or learned from the
sound bites of liberal journalists or news anchormen, who still glorify
Fidel Castro and his socialist Revolution.
Written with a feminist writer and cultural critic, Ileana Fuentes,
and published by the Center for a Free Cuba in Washington, D.C.,
"¡Dengue!" is a must-read. We learn from Dr. Mendoza that Cuba's "free"
socialized system of medical care is in shambles, a veritable disaster,
a disgraceful tragic regression from the once advanced medical care
system of the 1950s in the pre-Castro years.
The Arrest of a Medical Dissident
The book begins with Dr. Mendoza's dramatic arrest at his home in his
native city of Santiago de Cuba, the country's second-largest city,
located on the easternmost portion of the island and home of the Sierra
Maestra mountains.
Dr. Mendoza's crime was that of investigating, revealing and forcing
the communist dictatorship to admit the existence of a raging epidemic
of dengue fever in the spring and summer of 1997. In fact, Dr. Mendoza
was on the telephone with a Miami radio station communicating the
details of the epidemic to the outside world when the Cuban State
Security political police closed in:
"There are approximately 13 dead, 2,500 hospitalized patients and
30,000 people afflicted!" Mendoza frantically declared, warning the
interlocutor on the other side of the telephone line that the
communication would be cut at any moment, as State Security had
surrounded the house and was knocking on the door.
The Secret Epidemic of Hemorrhagic Dengue Fever
The communist regime did not want to reveal to the world the
existence of the epidemic because it was a personal embarrassment to
Fidel Castro, who had previously declared that the mosquito responsible
for dengue, the Aedes aegypti, had been eradicated long before by the
long arm of the Revolution!
More importantly, such a disclosure endangered the burgeoning Cuban
tourist industry, which at the time was in high gear preparing for the
Santiago Carnival, the Expo Caribe '97 celebration, the World Youth and
Students Festival, and "a marathon of cultural and propaganda events
planned for Santiago de Cuba that year."
Because the Cuban communist authorities in the public health system
kept the epidemic hush-hush, calling the disease "an unspecified virus,"
the people continued to medicate themselves with aspirin for the
prodromal (early flu-like) viral symptoms of the disease, tragically
worsening the hemorrhagic manifestations of the disease.
Aspirin, about the only medication available to ordinary Cubans for
any disease, aggravates bleeding by impairing the ability of platelets
to agglutinate and coagulate bleeding sites. Dr. Mendoza describes some
hapless patients who bled from every body orifice and suffocated on
their own blood because of the bleeding tendency of the disease,
worsened by the anti-platelet effects of aspirin.
And yet Dr. Gustavo Kouri, head of Cuba's Institute of Tropical
Medicine, violated Hippocrates' precepts of medical ethics when, in the
midst of the epidemic, under the direction of Fidel Castro and to
guarantee his own safety, cowardly certified that there was no dengue
epidemic and even falsified details about the disease to the media and
the public in a campaign of disinformation for example, claiming that
the mosquito Aedes aegypti did not breed in dirty, stagnant water or in
marshes but rather in clean, potable water!
Be that as it may, Dr. Mendoza was arrested, separated from his wife,
Caridad Piñon (also a courageous, dissident physician), and their small
children, who, to make matters even more desperate for the valiant
physician, were ostracized by their neighbors. Dr. Mendoza was then
solemnly condemned to eight years in prison for the crime of
"disseminating enemy propaganda." And this, despite the fact that the
government less than a week later was forced to admit the existence of
the deadly epidemic.
But Dr. Mendoza had succeeded in getting the attention of the foreign
press, and Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience.
He served 18 months in the horrible Boniato prison under subhuman
conditions before he was released in the wake of mounting international
pressure. Once free, Dr. Mendoza was then forced into exile by the
communist regime.
Socialized Medicine and the Gulag
Besides the trying details of his life in communist Cuba his
clamoring for workers' rights, his fight for independent unions for
health professionals, and his efforts at founding an independent medical
association what Dr. Mendoza tells us about the realities of Cuba's
health care system deserves to be told to a wider, English-speaking
audience.
Yes, there are still many influential "authorities" in this country
who still believe that a universal, "more equitable" system of health
care "like the one in Cuba" is worthy of imitation. Dr. Mendoza's
testimony should serve as an antidote to those who are peddling the
venomous snake oil of socialized medicine like that in socialist Cuba.
Dr. Mendoza reminds us that for more than 30 years, even during the
alleged "golden years of the Revolution," milk has been distributed by
the ration book only to children up to seven years of age and to the
elderly. Everyone else wanting milk must obtain it on the black market
and risk imprisonment.
With such privations, it is not surprising that malnutrition,
including vitamin deficiencies, such as lack of thiamine causing
peripheral neuropathies and blindness (beriberi), is rampant. We also
learn that in order to feed their families, a vast proportion of the
estimated 180,000 to 200,000 "common criminals" confined to Cuba's 500
prisons are people who have violated the law by killing their own pigs,
cattle and even horses, and selling the excess meat on the black market.
The Boniato prison, where Dr. Mendoza was held, was built in the
1940s to contain no more than 720 prisoners. Yet, while he was confined
there in 1998, there were 2,200 men serving long, harsh sentences for
such crimes. Nor should we neglect to state that with such a humongous
penal colony, Cuba has become a veritable gulag where, Dr. Mendoza
informs us, "acute diarrhea, parasitic infestations, amebas, gastritis
and gastric ulcers, etc., are rampant due to the dire conditions of
hygiene and sanitation, the meager allotment of clean water, and the
horrible, rotten food rations distributed to the prisoners."
Hygiene and Sanitation in a Workers' Paradise
"The Cuban people suffer in silence," writes Dr. Mendoza, "assailed
by successive infestations and epidemic diseases due to the deteriorated
conditions of the public health infrastructure, the contamination of
rivers, streams, and Cuba's once beautiful bays and coastline." One
reason for so many outbreaks of pestilential diseases, such as acute
diarrhea, leptospirosis (from the vast rat population), hepatitis
(fecal-oral contamination), typhoid fever, etc., is because of the poor
state of hygiene and sanitation on the island.
Sources of potable water are frequently contaminated by runoff from
old, leaky pipes (plumbing that preceded the 1959 Revolution) and
potable water coming in contact with raw sewage. It is not unusual to
see fecal material seeping from the ground and floating in stagnant
water in the streets!
Hospitals are not exempt to the deplorable, unsanitary conditions.
Cockroaches and mice roam the hospital wards. Floors are dirty because
of lack of cleaning material, detergents, and the overall lamentable
unhygienic milieu of the Cuban health care system. Hospital gowns, linen
and towels must be brought to the hospital and cleaned by the patients'
families.
Poor sanitation is extended to medical instruments handled by doctors
and nurses; these are not properly sterilized and frequently remain
dirty with the remains of tissue and blood after their use. Syringes are
frequently used to inject different patients without any sterilization,
and "disposable" gloves are used and reused on different patients. Not
surprisingly, infectious diseases such an impetigo and hepatitis, and
infestations such as scabies, lice and fungal diseases are also
commonplace in the population.
Predictably, hospitals for ordinary Cubans have a dearth of the most
basic medicines and medical equipment to care for patients. Doctors have
no sphygmomanometers to measure blood pressure, sterile gloves, sterile
water for diluting injections, syringes, soap, disinfectants, and the
most basic items that one would expect in hospitals and clinics.
Dr. Mendoza points out the most essential medical equipment is not
available, not because of the embargo but because of the misallocation
of priorities and a perverse system of tourism and health apartheid that
has developed in Cuba under the auspices of the communist (fascist)
regime. As we shall see in Part II of this essay, clinics that cater to
tourists and the privileged mayimbe class have the latest medical
technology.
And yet, Dr. Mendoza reminds us, in the pre-Castro years of the1950s,
Cubans had excellent access to medical care through association clinics
(clinicas mutualistas), which predated the American concept of health
maintenance organizations (HMOs) by decades, as well as through private
clinics. Notwithstanding the regime's published statistics, according to
Dr. Mendoza, the standard of living and the state of health of the Cuban
people were far better in 1958 than they are today, making evident the
direful state of medical care regression since Castro's communist
takeover.
It is no wonder that one of the goals of the Colegio Médico
Independiente de Santiago de Cuba, founded by Dr. Mendoza, is to at
least return the Oriente district to the state of salubrious health that
prevailed in the 1950s!
In the concluding
Part
II of this essay, we will have a few words to say about Castro's
"doctor diplomacy" as well as reveal other aspects of the hidden face of
Cuba's socialized ("free") system of medical care, such as apartheid
tourism and health.
Miguel A. Faria Jr., M.D., is Editor-in-Chief of the Medical
Sentinel (www.haciendapub.com) and author of "Vandals at the Gates of
Medicine" (1995); "Medical Warrior: Fighting Corporate Socialized
Medicine" (1997); and "Cuba in Revolution: Escape From a Lost Paradise"
(2002). All three books are available from
www.haciendapub.com.
|