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PBS’s Ray Suarez can’t believe the truth about Cuba’s healthcare
Hotair ^ | 12/31/2010 | Fausta Wertz

Posted on 12/31/2010 9:27:04 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Ray Suarez is having a snit about Mary O’Grady’s article,

Apparently, Mary Anastasia O’Grady’s critique of Ray Suarez’ PBS piece on Castro’s health care system stung him not only a bit, but a lot. In a rambling and disjointed rebuttal on the PBS News Hour website, Suarez attempted to defend his Castro propaganda-laden report by citing instances where opposing views were presented, but the rebuttal quickly degenerated into a personal attack on O’Grady.

Suarez claims that

Cuba has, for a country of its income, very high life expectancy. Cuba has, for a country of its income, low infant mortality. Cuba has, for a country of its income, low rates of infectious disease.

Yet Suarez forgets to mention that the statistics for any of these are provided by the Cuban government, the same government that has refused access to any independent outside organization to examine the statistics, the criteria for the data, or how the statistics are gathered. Suarez can’t seem to realize that any statistics put out by a totalitarian regime in a closed society are to be questioned.

Additionally, Suarez ignored the medical apartheid system itself.

Suarez says that “Ms. O’Grady has not gotten that memo,” which brings up the cables.

What cables?

Ah, the Wikileaks cable:
Cables spotlight health woes in Cuba
A U.S. diplomatic cable from Havana in 2008 noted the problems in Cuba’s public health system.

The U.S. cable is not an in-depth assessment of Cuba’s health system. Rather, it’s a string of anecdotes gathered by the FSHP from Cubans such as “manicurists, masseuses, hair stylists, chauffeurs, musicians, artists, yoga teachers, tailors, as well as HIV/AIDS and cancer patients, physicians, and foreign medical students.”

At one OB-Gyn hospital, the dispatch reported, the staff “used a primitive manual vacuum to aspirate” the womb of a Cuban woman who had a miscarriage “without any anesthesia or pain medicine. She was offered no . . . follow up appointments.”

A 6-year old boy with bone cancer could only be visited at a hospital by his parents for “limited hours,” the cable added.

Cancer patients receiving chemotherapy or radiation get “little in the way of symptom or side-effects care . . . that is critically important in being able to continue treatments, let alone provide comfort to an already emotionally distraught victim,” the dispatch noted.

“Cancer patients are not provided with, nor can they find locally, simple medications such as Aspirin, Tylenol, skin lotions, vitamins, etc.,” it added.

HIV-positive Cubans have only one facility, the Instituto Pedro Kouri in Havana, that can provide specialty care and medications, the cable noted. Because of transportation problems and costs, some patients from the provinces may be seen only once per year.

Kouri institute patients can wait months for an appointment, “but can often move ahead in line by offering a gift,” the dispatch added. “We are told five Cuban convertible pesos (approximately USD 5.40) can get one an x-ray.”

Although the practice was reportedly discontinued, some HIV-positive patients had the letters “SIDA” (AIDS) stamped on their national ID cards, making it hard for them to find good jobs or pursue university studies, according to the cable.

The cable acknowledged that medical institutions reserved for Cuba’s ruling elites and foreigners who pay in hard currencies “are hygienically qualified, and have a wide array of diagnostic equipment with a full complement of laboratories, well-stocked pharmacies, and private patient suites with cable television and bathrooms.”

Hospitals and clinics used by average Cubans don’t come close, the dispatch added, providing details on the FSHP’s visits to four Havana hospitals:

At the Hermanos Ameijeiras Hospital, part of which is reserved for foreign patients and was featured in the Michael Moore documentary Sicko, a “gift” of about $22 to the hospital administrator helps average Cubans obtain better treatment there. The exterior of the Ramon Gonzalez Coro OB-Gyn hospital was “dilapidated and crumbling” and its Newborn Intensive Care Unit was “using a very old infant `Bird’ respirator/ventilator — the model used in the U.S. in the 1970s.”

During a visit to the Calixto Garcia Hospital, which serves only Cubans, the U.S. nurse “was struck by the shabbiness of the facility . . .and the lack of everything (medical supplies, privacy, professional care staff). To the FSHP it was reminiscent of a scene from some of the poorest countries in the world.”

At the Salvador Allende Hospital, the emergency room appeared “very orderly, clean and organized.” But the rest of the facility was “in shambles” and guards by the entrance “smelled of alcohol.”

Of course Suarez will probably dismiss this as “anecdotal”. Since he was not free to visit any clinics/hospitals/facilities on this own while in Cuba, he ought, however, to spend some time looking at first-hand evidence and eyewitness accounts by people who are in Cuba.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cuba; healthcare; pbs; raysuarez

1 posted on 12/31/2010 9:27:05 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
Michael Moore documentary Sicko

Is that the film that is banned from being shown in Cuba?

2 posted on 12/31/2010 9:35:46 AM PST by Graybeard58
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To: SeekAndFind

Bump!


3 posted on 12/31/2010 9:35:49 AM PST by Paul Ross (Ronald Reagan-1987:"We are always willing to be trade partners but never trade patsies.")
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To: SeekAndFind

Tell him to make a personal, government escorted tour and discover the joys of a Potemkin village!


4 posted on 12/31/2010 9:36:52 AM PST by I am Richard Brandon
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To: SeekAndFind

They always bring up “infant mortality” without mentioning that in the US it even includes babies that die before birth while in some countries, like Cuba, they don’t start counting for a day or two AFTER birth.

Not even comparable.


5 posted on 12/31/2010 9:39:24 AM PST by GeronL (#7 top poster at CC, friend to all, nicest guy ever, +96/-14, ignored by 1 sockpuppet.. oh & BANNED)
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To: SeekAndFind
"...for a country of its income..."

That's what we used to call "weasel words".

6 posted on 12/31/2010 9:50:02 AM PST by The Duke
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To: SeekAndFind
Cuba has, for a country of its income, low rates of infectious disease.

Things are so bad in Cuba even germs won't go there.

7 posted on 12/31/2010 9:53:02 AM PST by oyez (The difference in genius and stupidity is that genius has limits.)
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To: SeekAndFind
For some perverse reason Castro's Cuba is still the Holy Grail of the collectivist left. This article demonstrates the utter futility of any argument with them on that subject. Show them evidence that the place is a failed fifteenth century craphole, 'splain it till yer blue in the face, and you get "That's what you say, you probably like Palin too, right?" PBS, the democrat party, or a middle class schmo who doesn't even vote, all the same. I do not waste my breath any more. Castro, his family, his party, and their cult of tyrrany won't be destroyed by debating their defiiciencies with the mental equivalents of a tree stump. Fifty years is half a century too long for that obscenity to have persisted in this hemisphere.
8 posted on 12/31/2010 10:04:12 AM PST by Seven plus One
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To: SeekAndFind

A leftie who is a frantic self deluder, as his leftie consruct of a fantasy world of lies, crashes down around him?...Stop the presses!


9 posted on 12/31/2010 10:06:31 AM PST by DGHoodini (Iran Azadi)
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To: I am Richard Brandon

Model for the Obama State Hospital System.

10 posted on 12/31/2010 10:43:40 AM PST by oyez (The difference in genius and stupidity is that genius has limits.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I’d just have to ask Ray Suarez why Cuba is so poor.

After all in the 50’s it was one of the wealthier Caribbean countries.

It seems like if they wanted better health care they should just go back to what they were doing then.


11 posted on 12/31/2010 11:02:08 AM PST by seowulf ("If you write a whole line of zeroes, it's still---nothing"...Kira Alexandrovna Argounova)
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To: SeekAndFind

Suarez is one of many reasons I do not watch PBS.


12 posted on 12/31/2010 11:02:51 AM PST by Flasfyre (Protect freedom of the press....eliminate our journalists)
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To: SeekAndFind

Ask Suarez about Allison Notter, the young American dancer who died in a Cuban hospital just two weeks ago.
I lived in Cuba and taught English at a medical school. There us ni medicine, the hospitals are filthy, the doctors are semi illiterate.


13 posted on 12/31/2010 1:13:30 PM PST by kabumpo (Kabumpo)
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