On 5/17/06, Ulhas Joglekar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What were life expectancies in Cuba in 1959?

"Cuban achievements in health care since 1959 were a consequence of
the full commitment to health care by the state, the planned economy,
and mass participation. In 1959 the infant mortality rate was 60/1000
live births and life expectancy was 65.1 years. By the period of
1983-88 Cuba had attained an infant mortality rate of 15/1000 and
female life expectancy of 76 years compared to the figures of 27/1000
and 73 years, respectively, in South Korea. In response to problems
that arose in the 1960s an improved health care model stressing the
involvement of health care workers in the community was proposed in
1974. In the early 1980s 20,000 family physicians were trained to
provide primary care services in the communities.

"Two external factors, the US economic embargo and the Council of
Mutual Economic Cooperation (CMEA), shaped the Cuban society and
economy, including its health care system. The U.S. embargo forced
Cuba to pay higher transportation costs to import medical supplies
from Soviet-bloc countries. Once the Soviet bloc collapsed, Washington
further tightened the embargo through the Torricelli Bill of 1992,
which bars U.S. subsidiaries in other countries from trading with Cuba
and forbids US portage for 6 months to any ship that has docked in
Cuba. As a result, in 1993 Cuba's imports for public health cost an
extra $45 million. ..."

from:  "The Cuban health care system and factors currently undermining
it." by Nayeri K. (Department of Preventive Medicine and Community
Health, State University of New York, Health Science Center at
Brooklyn 11203, USA.) published:  Journal of Community Health. 1995
Aug;20(4):321-34.

source: 
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=7593738&dopt=Abstract
(a service of the [U.S.] National Library of Medicine and the National
Institutes of Health.)

the ellipsis: "The CMEA was an important source for economic growth;
however, the adoption of the Soviet model of economic development
contributed to two internal factors that have undermined health care:
low productivity of labor and the growth of bureaucracy. Social
expenditures declined from 70% of the GNP in 1970 to 36% in 1995.
Meanwhile, administrative personnel grew from 90,000 persons in 1973
to 240,000 persons in 1984. In 1995 some 50,000 physicians were
serving a population of 11 million. Since 1986 a total of 1042
individuals have been found to be HIV positive. The policy of forced
isolation of HIV-positive persons and AIDS patients was relaxed
recently. While the health care system and its structure is sound, the
economic crisis undermines its material and moral foundations and
threatens its achievements."
--
Jim Devine / THIS SPACE FOR RENT: send my your quotes!

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