Call it "Castrocare" Cuba's former leader Fidel Castro sent doctors abroad for decades to work throughout Latin American and as far away as Africa
In some cases, like Haiti, the medical missions were seen
as purely humanitarian. In other places, like Venezuela, it was a form of
barter that provided Cuba with subsidized oil imports.
Cuba has long boasted of its program, which has generally
been well-received. So now Cuba is sending thousands of doctors to Brazil,
which badly needs the physicians in poor, rural areas and has the money to pay
for them. However, the program is meeting resistance in Brazil — not from
patients but from the medical establishment.
In the town of Pedreira, about 85 miles outside Sao
Paulo, Luis Fernades dos Santos is getting a broken tooth cared for at his
local public health clinic.
After the procedure, he says he's heard about the Cuban
doctor who is to be working here soon and thinks it's a good thing.
"Here in the city, you see people sleeping —
sleeping — for a day, two days waiting in line to see a doctor. And when it's
their turn, there is no doctor to see them," he says. "So that's why
I think bringing people in to help will make things better."
Over the summer, massive protests broke out in Brazil,
decrying, among other things, the state of the public health system. The
problems include aging equipment and a lack of medical facilities, things that
take time to fix. But the government moved quickly to address the lack of
doctors by bringing in Cuban physicians.
Opposition From The Medical
Establishment
The patients may be in favor, but most of the Brazilian
medical community is not.
When Cuban physicians arrived in the city of Fortaleza in
August, Brazilian doctors shouted at them, "Slaves, slaves!"
"We are not slaves," says Tania Aguiar Sosa,
one of the Cuban medical workers with decades of experience. "We are
health workers. We are professionals that provide help to whatever country
needs it."
She's worked in Venezuela and Haiti previously and was
headed to Angola before being rerouted to Brazil.
Brazilian medical unions are trying to mount a court
challenge to the use of Cuban doctors here.
Jose Roberto Murisset, the human rights secretary of the
National Doctors Federation, says that the Cuban government takes most of the
money that is paid for the doctors. The Brazilian government has also decreed
that the Cuban doctors have no right to ask for asylum in Brazil.
"Brazil has strong labor rights, but these Cuban
doctors don't have their rights guaranteed," he says.
The main bone of contention is that foreign doctors
arriving under the new program don't have to take the Brazilian medical exam to
practice. Murisset says that many of the doctors coming from abroad would fail
the test and are underqualified.
"Maybe the government thinks that these regions
don't need a full doctor. Maybe they think they need only a half doctor,"
he says.
But Dr. Adriano Peres Lora, head of the Pedreira
Municipal Hospital, disagrees.
He says he
has 50 beds at his facility serving 44,000 people in the community. If he can
get more doctors handling preventive care, then the main hospital will feel
less pressure, he says.
He says most Brazilian doctors don't want to work in
poor, rural communities like his, though the need is great."What we
need is basic attention. We lack doctors willing to work as general
practitioners in marginal communities," he says, adding that 80 percent or
more of the health problems people face can be resolved by seeing a doctor at
an early stage.
When the Brazilian government announced the program to bring in foreign doctors, more than 4,000 towns and cities applied to the federal government for extra help.
Back at the health clinic where a Cuban doctor will be working Brazilian doctor Flavio Blois de Mattos says he welcomes the help. He's overwhelmed at the moment. But he also thinks the Brazilian program is unethical
He says the Cuban doctor agreed to come even though the
Cuban government gets the lion's share of her salary, paid by the Brazilian
government. Still, the Cuban physician will make more in Brazil than she would
in Cuba. And that will help her 15-year-old daughter.
"I don't think it's correct. We are a democracy. Why
aren't we giving them the same rights we have?" he says.
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