Home  | Membership | Documents & Letters | Links  | Forum  | Chatroom | Donations | Search

 ESPAÑOL  

.
  INFOCUBA
 History
 Government
 Economy
 Social
 Education
 Health Care
 Cuba in Pictures
  HUMAN RIGHTS
 Human Rights
 Cubans Assassinated
 Massacres Executed
 Universal Declaration
 Crimes Videos
  OPPOSICION
 Opposition in Cuba
 Political Prisoners
 Independent Journalists
 Independent Libraries
 TERRORISM
 Cuba & Terrorism
 Castro & Middle East
 Biological Warfare
 Photo Gallery
  NEWS ARCHIVE
 Year 2008
 Year 2007
 Year 2006
 Year 2005
 Year 2004
 Year 2003
 Year 2002
 
 
* Registered & Hosted by
www.versioninternet.com
 
INFOCUBA:  HEALTH CARE
 
 

The Health Care System

The health care system is often touted by many analysts as one of the Castro government's greatest achievements. What this analysis ignores is that the revolutionary government inherited an already-advanced health sector when it took power in 1959.

Cuba's infant mortality rate of 32 per 1,000 live births in 1957 was the lowest in Latin America and the 13th lowest in the world, according to UN data. Cuba ranked ahead of France, Belgium, west Germany, Israel, Japan, Austria, Italy, Spain, and Portugal, all of which would eventually pass Cuba in this indicator during the following decades.

Today, Cuba remains the most advanced country in the region in this measure, but its world ranking has fallen from 13th to 24th during the Castro era, according to UN Data. Also missing from the conventional analysis of Cuba's infant mortality rates is its staggering abortion rate -- 0.71 abortions per live birth in 1991, according to the latest UN data -- which, because of selective termination of "high-risk" pregnancies, yields lower numbers for infant mortality. Cuba's abortion rate is at least twice the rate for the other countries in the table below for which data are available.

In terms of physicians and dentists per capita, Cuba in 1957 ranked third in Latin America, behind only Uruguay and Argentina -- both of which were more advanced than the United States in this measure. Cuba's 128 physicians and dentists per 100,000 people in 1957 was the same as the Netherlands, and ahead of the United Kingdom (122 per 100,000 people) and Finland (96).

Unfortunately, the UN statistical yearbook no longer publishes these statistics, so more recent comparisons are not possible, but it is completely erroneous to characterize pre-Revolutionary Cuba as backward in terms of healthcare.

 
TOPICS
-The Health Care System
-Healthcare in Cuba: "Medical Apartheid" and Health Tourism

-The U.S. Embargo and Healthcare in Cuba: Myth Versus Reality
-U.S. Sales of Medicines and Medical Supplies to Cuba
-Humanitarian Assistance
 

"Hospitals in Havana"

Click here
 
WORLD: INFANT MORTALITY
(DEATHS PER 1,000 LIVE BIRTHS)
     
COUNTRY 1957 1990-95
JAPAN 40 4
ICELAND 16 5
SWEDEN 18 5
FINLAND 28 5
SWITZERLAND 23 6
BELGIUM 36 6
GERMANY (A) 36 6
NETHERLANDS 18 7
AUSTRALIA 21 7
DENMARK 23 7
UNITED KINGDOM 24 7
CANADA 31 7
IRELAND 33 7
FRANCE 34 7
LUXEMBOURG 39 7
AUSTRIA 44 7
SPAIN 53 7
NORWAY 21 8
ITALY 50 8
UNITED STATES 26 9
ISRAEL 39 9
GREECE 44 10
PORTUGAL 88 10
CUBA 32 12
MALAYSIA 76 13
     
(A) - FOR 1957, INCLUDES ONLY FRG.
     
SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS.
 
 


Home  | Membership | Documents & Letters | Links  | Forum  | Chatroom | Donations | Search


NET FOR CUBA INTERNATIONAL
http://www.netforcuba.org
All Rights Reserved  ©