(2) Bill Frist, Cuba's Most Valuable Export: Its Healthcare Expertise. Forbes, June 8, 2015 (blog).
http://www.forbes.com/sites/bill ... althcare-expertise/
Quote:
“The Cuban government reportedly earns $8 billion a year in revenues from professional services carried out by its doctors and nurses [stationed abroad], with some 37,000 Cuban nationals currently working in 77 countries.
“In my travels doing medical mission work to underserved regions in over a dozen African nations, the most common nonindigenous health personnel I run across are doctors and nurses from Cuba offering frontline primary and emergency care.
“The doctors [in Cuba] are paid paltry amounts, many having second jobs. But in my conversations with them, they reflect love for their work and a palpable passion about caring for their patients.
“Part of Cuba’s success can be attributed to having the world’s largest number of physicians per capita.
“Cuban citizens may be driving cars from the 1950s and have a meager average monthly wage of $20, but they boast ‘first world’ population health status
“Of course there is much we won’t emulate. I, for one, would not want to get seriously ill in Cuba. Cuba’s medical system lacks effective tertiary care, is sorely deficient in specialized care, and has only limited access to important drugs. Rationing of care and years of embargo means shortages of medicines and even aspirin and band aids require a prescription from a doctor. Hospitals can face acute shortages of everything from urinary catheters to the more effective second- and third-line antibiotics. Medical technological advances have either not reached the island nation or are beyond the government’s financial means.
Note:
(a) Please his “bio” underneath his name in the article. See also Bill Frist
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Frist
(1952- ; US senator (R, Tenn), 1995-2007; MD, Harvard Medical school 1978; bachelor's from Princeton University 1974)
(b) Physicians (per 1,000 people). World Bank, undated
data.worldbank.org/indicator/SH.MED.PHYS.ZS
(In 2010: Austria 4.9, China 1.8, Cuba 6.7, Greece 6.2, Hong Kong no data, India 0.6, Japan 2.3, Korea, Rep 2.0, Singapore 1.9, US 2.4)
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