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Healthcare: What is China's Status? For Example, Compare and Contrast Healthcare in China and Cuba.

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Boojatta Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-27-10 11:52 PM
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Healthcare: What is China's Status? For Example, Compare and Contrast Healthcare in China and Cuba.
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LAGC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-27-10 11:57 PM
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1. I don't know about China, but doesn't Cuba...
...have such a surplus of medical care providers that it exports its doctors to other Latin American countries?

Remember: even Che was a doctor, even with his revolutionary guerilla role.
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Billy Burnett Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-28-10 01:31 AM
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2. Some Cuba stats.
Edited on Sat Aug-28-10 01:32 AM by Billy Burnett

Learn From Cuba
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/43b/185.html

“It is in some sense almost an anti-model,” according to Eric Swanson, the programme manager for the Bank’s Development Data Group, which compiled the WDI, a tome of almost 400 pages covering scores of economic, social, and environmental indicators.

Indeed, Cuba is living proof in many ways that the Bank’s dictum that economic growth is a pre-condition for improving the lives of the poor is over-stated, if not, downright wrong.

-

It has reduced its infant mortality rate from 11 per 1,000 births in 1990 to seven in 1999, which places it firmly in the ranks of the western industrialised nations. It now stands at six, according to Jo Ritzen, the Bank’s Vice President for Development Policy, who visited Cuba privately several months ago to see for himself.

By comparison, the infant mortality rate for Argentina stood at 18 in 1999;

Chile’s was down to ten; and Costa Rica, at 12. For the entire Latin American and Caribbean region as a whole, the average was 30 in 1999.

Similarly, the mortality rate for children under the age of five in Cuba has fallen from 13 to eight per thousand over the decade. That figure is 50% lower than the rate in Chile, the Latin American country closest to Cuba’s achievement. For the region as a whole, the average was 38 in 1999.

“Six for every 1,000 in infant mortality - the same level as Spain - is just unbelievable,” according to Ritzen, a former education minister in the Netherlands. “You observe it, and so you see that Cuba has done exceedingly well in the human development area.”

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Similarly, Cuba devoted 9.1% of its gross domestic product (GDP) during the 1990s to health care, roughly equivalent to Canada’s rate. Its ratio of 5.3 doctors per 1,000 people was the highest in the world.

The question that these statistics pose, of course, is whether the Cuban experience can be replicated. The answer given here is probably not.

“What does it, is the incredible dedication,” according to Wayne Smith, who was head of the US Interests Section in Havana in the late 1970s and early 1980s and has travelled to the island many times since.



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