This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. VII, No. 8, March 25-31, 2007
A Gift of Health from Cuba
Victims of typhoon Reming (international name- Durian) were recent beneficiaries
of almost two tons of medicines and vaccines from the Cuban government, a
socialist country with one of the world’s most advanced health system.
by dabet castaÑeda Responding to a request for
support from the Philippine government, the Republic of Cuba delivered on March
9 approximately two tons of medicines worth US$22,000 as donation for the
victims of typhoon Reming (international name - Durian). Typhoon Reming caused
devastation in the province of Albay. More than 1,000 casualties were reported
by the Philippine government. The number is still increasing because more are
dying from hunger. The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) reported
on Feb. 25 that flood
victims have suffered increased acute respiratory infections, diarrhoeal and
skin diseases, and dengue fever. The Republic of Cuba,
through Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Jorge Rey Jimenez, turned
over to Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo the donation of medicines and
vaccines. The DFA secretary then turned over the donation to
Dr. Maria Virginia Ala,
Officer-in-Charge of the Bureau of International Health Cooperation, Department
of Health (DoH), the Philippine
government agency that facilitates the distribution of medicines to the typhoon
victims. “Cuba is not a rich country
but we try to share what we have,” Jimenez said in an interview with Bulatlat.
The ambassador said Cuba’s
bilateral relations with the Philippines have been going on for more than 60
years. Blockade A year after the January
1959 victory of the Cuban revolution against the brutal dictatorship of
Fulgencio Batista, the U.S. government unilaterally imposed a blockade against
Cuba. The Cuban government, in its annual report for 2006 and prospects for
2007, said the U.S. government has done such sanctions “to use hunger and
desperation to crush the will of the Cuban people so that it ceases to support
its legitimate government.” Due to the blockade,
Jimenez said Cuba has no access to international banks because Washington’s
power to “block aid via the World Bank (WB) and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF).” Cuba has been waging a
socialist revolution since 1959. Although the country has
been subjected to economic, trade and financial sanctions for over 45 years, the
Cuban government reported in January that in 2006 its economy grew faster than
any other country in Latin America. Its GDP growth for 2006 was 12.5 percent.
This is 7.2 percent higher than the average rise in GDP of Latin American
countries which stands only at 5.3 percent. “These advances reflect a
trend of gradual consolidation of the economy which has been apparent since
2004,” the Cuban report said. The Republic of Cuba also
boast of a 90 percent literacy rate, Jimenez said, a rate comparable only to
first world countries. “Literacy was the first task of the socialist
government,” Jimenez added. Advanced health system “Cuba has one of the
world’s most advanced health care system,” Jimenez said. From having only 6,000
doctors before 1959 with half of them leaving Cuba after the war, Cuba now has
70,594 doctors, 10,554 dentists, 2,753 pharmacists, 89,462 nurses and nursing
auxiliaries, and 94,286 technicians and other paramedics. It has reduced its infant
mortality rate to only 5.3 percent, “a rate matched only by industrialized
countries,” Jimenez said. “Some years ago people in
Cuba just die and nobody knows why. They die of hunger or diabetes or
tuberculosis or parasitism,” the ambassador said. In recent years, however,
nobody in Cuba has died of hunger nor diarrhea, a common disease in third world
countries, and the deadly malaria, a mosquito-borne disease also prevalent in
under-developed countries, Jimenez said. To prevent common diseases,
the Cuban National Pharmaceutical Industry has produced vaccines against
influenza, meningococcemia, hepatitis-B and certain cancers: in the cervix,
mouth and throat, and the lungs. Health and education
account for 22.6 percent of the Cuban government’s budget to ensure that both
services can continue to be free of charge for the entire 11 million population. Proof of a healthy populace
is the Cuban’s life expectancy rate, Jimenez said. In its 2006 report, the
Cuban government said their biggest health problems are chronic non-communicable
diseases and the “aging of our population.” “Cuban people live longer
nowadays,” Jimenez said. Sixty-five-year-olds have a life expectancy of 20 more
years and those aged 80 years old are expected to live for eight more years.
Jimenez said the Cuban
government expects 60-year-olds to represent 25 percent of its population in
2025 due to birth-rate reduction and the elimination of an important group of
diseases. Bulatlat © 2007 Bulatlat
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