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Professors, researchers and students;
Distinguished guests:
That ceremony took place on a day like today, October 17, but
40 years ago, five days before the outbreak of the 1962 crisis that has been so
thoroughly discussed and analyzed in recent days. A nuclear holocaust was on the
verge of taking place.
Exactly one and a half years had passed since the mercenary
invasion by the Bay of Pigs in Playa Girón, and 10 months since the culmination
of the feat of the Literacy Campaign. More than 2000 doctors and most of the
medical school professors had left the country. It was necessary to make up for
those losses and to quickly train the doctors needed for the ambitious
revolutionary public health program. Part of that effort was the founding of an
important Basic Sciences Institute, to speed up the process of training and
graduating doctors with the revolutionary quality and knowledge required. In a
matter of weeks, this Institute was established in a large facility that had
once been the headquarters of one of the most important institutions of the
haute bourgeoisie, many of whom were already living with their families in the
United States.
In honor of the heroic victory of our combatants at Playa
Girón, that was the name given to this new institute.
Given the special circumstances of that moment, and the
transcendental importance of the Victoria de Girón Institute of Basic Medical
Sciences in the subsequent evolution of Cuban medicine, I felt it would be
fitting to recall some of the ideas I put forward on that day, using the same
words that I used then. They will comprise a large part of my speech today,
given their continued relevance.
At one point, I happened to begin talking about the nursing
sector:
"We believed," I said, "that the medical students would be
present here at this meeting of the medical family. We have seen that the girls
from the nursing schools are present here as well. And this pleases us very
much, because I do not understand how the nurses were forgotten during the
discussions of all of the problems concerning medical care and doctors. During
the discussion of student associations, the nursing schools were forgotten.
Nurses constitute an important, fundamental part of all the work in the medical
sector, and the Revolution has a great interest in training revolutionary
nurses. Just look at their enthusiasm!
"Health care is one of the most sensitive areas through which
our enemies tried to hurt our people. It is very logical that we Cubans aspire
to lowering infant mortality; to extending the average life expectancy of every
citizen; to combating diseases, and combating death. There is no aspiration more
legitimate than this one, or more sacred, one could say.
"Unscrupulous individuals tried to hurt our people this way.
They tried to deprive our country of the resources needed to fight for life, to
fight against disease, to save thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands of lives, especially the lives of children. How? By taking away our
doctors.
"When they attacked us through Playa Girón, their intention was
to take control of a piece of our territory, and from there they would begin to
launch bombings every day and every night, subjecting our country to a war of
attrition that would have cost us hundreds of thousands of lives. But even so,
one of the most heinous actions undertaken against our country by imperialism
was the policy of bribing doctors and attempting to bring about an exodus of
doctors to the United States, thus depriving our country of the qualified
technical personnel needed to care for our sick. And they did in fact manage to
take away a certain number of doctors.
"They knew that they were causing harm, not to us, but to the
people. It was painful for us to see the harm they were so cruelly inflicting
with this policy. We know the anxiety and obsession felt by the poor sectors
with regard to doctors; we know how grateful the peasants are for the rural
medical services provided to them, the medicines sent to them, the hospitals
that have been built for them.
"One of the areas where the influence of the Revolution has
been most strongly felt has been the field of health care. In our country, there
were only 9000 beds in public hospitals.
"Everyone knows how the sick were treated in hospitals back
then, how they often had to sleep on the floor, how poor and even shocking the
conditions were in many hospitals.
"Everyone knows that no doctors ever went to the countryside
here; that the rural population was virtually abandoned; that in order to see a
doctor, a peasant had to begin by selling a pig, half a dozen chickens, anything
that could be sold.
"When our people had no medical care, they did not bother to
take our doctors to the United States, it did not matter to them. When our
country initiated an extraordinary medical care program, rising funding for
public health care from 21 million to 103 million pesos, that was when they
decided to try to deprive our people of doctors.
"Of course, the doctors they took away were neither little
lambs nor saints, obviously."
"Medical students had to make enormous efforts to graduate,
especially those from other parts of the country, and then they could not find
work anywhere. Doctors were concentrated in the capital. A recently graduated
doctor would be considered very lucky to be given a minor post at city hall, in
a hospital, and a salary of 100 or 120 pesos, anything at all.
"When a doctor in the class society we lived in, the
exploitative society we lived in, became an experienced professional and
achieved fame, the people could no longer count on this doctor, except for
exceptional cases, because there are always exceptions, naturally. These doctors
became the doctors of the rich. It would be very difficult for a humble man or
woman of the people to receive their services.
"Many of those doctors were the doctors of the owners of the
sugar mills, the millionaires, and when the millionaires left, they missed them,
and decided to leave as well.
"In spite of the fact that many of the doctors who were seduced
into going to the United States ended up washing dishes, operating elevators and
doing similar kinds of work; in spite of this, there can be no doubt that the
attitude of the doctors who left was a highly immoral attitude. This is a crime
against the people, against the sick, against the unfortunate, against those who
suffer.
"Who can help us to solve our problems? First of all, we must
solve our problems with good doctors. Because it is only fair to say that while
there have been corrupt, disreputable and money-hungry doctors, there have also
been many, very many good, conscientious and humane doctors, who view their
profession the way they should.
"Some took the Hippocratic oath, and others took the
hypocritical oath. Those who took the genuine oath and viewed their mission as a
sacred one did not leave the country, and never will. These are the ones who
must help us solve our problem.
"Those who remained pure in the midst of a society of
corruption and selfishness can serve as seeds and as teachers.
"What is the significance of those who have left? Speaking in
medical terms, it is quite similar to what happens when you squeeze a tumor.
"The imperialists are trying to use those who have left for
propaganda purposes. This is like making propaganda with pus, because those who
have left are the pus of Cuban society, squeezed out of that society by the
Revolution.
"The petit bourgeois, weak-kneed, hesitant spirit of the first
moments is nowhere to be seen today.
"What do we have to do? We should go ahead and solve our
problems now and forever.
"When it comes to our people, and our sentiments as
revolutionaries, what makes up for the repugnance and disgust caused by the
traitors and deserters? This is what makes up for all that: this new mass, this
contingent that is beginning its studies, the largely purified mass of today’s
university students.
"I can assure you that today our country has a medical school
with a formidable mass of good students and revolutionary students.
"What do we have, as of now? Several hundreds of excellent
comrades who will graduate year after year and will then go on to reinforce the
contingent of revolutionary doctors, while providing the country with a new
mentality, a new conception of the work of a doctor; a work that, as in the case
of teachers as well, the people should hold in the highest esteem. Of course,
bad doctors conspire against the good image that the people should have of
doctors.
"That mass will entail a further contribution year after year
and a more steadfast, pure, conscientious attitude among the doctors at
work.
"That contingent will forge a spirit that will combat the
spirit of selfishness, or the remnants of the spirit of selfishness and
laziness, which can corrupt students – yes, even students!
"Our people can rest assured that all of the young people
studying in the medical school are studying full time, and we are going to train
doctors in massive numbers, much better doctors. And we believe that this is the
Revolution’s duty to the people.
"Now then, did this provide a definitive solution to the
problem? No! There is, for example, a particular circumstance, which is the
following: the doctors all piled up in Havana. That society concentrated doctors
in Havana, and then they did not want to leave. For Miami, yes; for the Sierra
Maestra mountains, no! And many of them preferred to take the route of leaving
the country, instead of taking the route of going out and serving their
people.
"Our problems could still not be solved with the measures I
have mentioned. Where is the true and definitive solution to the problem, where?
With a view to the future, the only, true, definitive solution is the massive
training of doctors. Today the Revolution has the forces and the resources and
the organization and the people – the people, which are the most important of
all! – to begin a program for the training of doctors in the numbers that is
needed. And not only a lot of doctors, but above all, good doctors. And not only
good as doctors, but also good as men and women, as patriots and as
revolutionaries!
"And who says the Revolution will not be able to do this? We
are already showing ourselves to be able! And the best proof of that is this
ceremony tonight.
"Of course, in order to enter university, you need at least to
be senior high school graduates. What was done? It was decided that senior high
school graduates in both the sciences and the arts would be accepted as medical
students, after a short course that will begin tomorrow.
"Because of this," I continued to explain to those young people
on that night 40 years ago, "some 800 students are now entering this Institute
of Basic Sciences, and another 240 are beginning their studies at the (recently
created) University of Oriente. That makes a total of over 1000. Over 1000
beginning their studies! And that is just this year.
"But at the same time, at this institute, there are also 1300
senior high school students beginning a 15-month course. When they are combined
with those who will graduate from senior high school, this means that next year,
even allowing for those who drop out of their studies, there will be 1250
students entering school here, or beginning university, in other words, right
here.
"Also at the same time, this year at least 2500 junior high
school students will begin a special two-year senior high school program that
will allow them to enter medical school immediately after graduation.
"And after that? After that there will be a whole river of
medical students: 1000 this year, who will begin studying in 1963; 1250 who will
begin in 1964; 2500 who will begin in 1965. Of course, because the Revolution
has not been working in vain, the Revolution can do all of this, because it has
enormous contingents of high school students from which to select in accordance
with their preferences and their capacity. And that is because the Revolution
has been carrying out a major educational work from the beginning. Keep in mind
that there were only around 120,000 junior high school students when the
Revolution took power, and today there are close to 250,000. These are figures,
these are facts, and these are the fruit of the work of the Revolution. And now
we have to have special courses, but as of 1965, there will not be room here or
in any other building like this one for all those who will be able to study
medicine. And that is the solution, the only and definitive solution!
"And not only that, but rather, we can still do something
–although it may be more symbolic than anything else– to help other
countries.
"We have the case of Algeria, for example. In Algeria, the
majority of the doctors were French, and many of them left. With four million
more inhabitants than we have, and a large number of diseases left there by
colonialism, they have less than a third of the doctors that we have. They are
facing a truly tragic situation in the field of health care. And that is why
today, when we were talking to the students, we told them that 50 volunteer
doctors are needed. And we are sure that these volunteers will be there. Just
50. We are sure that even more will offer to go, as an expression of our
people’s spirit of solidarity with a friendly people that are worse off than we
are.
"Today we can send 50; in another eight or ten years, who knows
how many. And we will be able to offer our help to our sister nations, because
with every year that passes, we will have more doctors, and with every year that
passes, more students will enter medical school. Because the Revolution has the
right to reap what it sows, and it has the right to gather the fruits that it
has sown.
"And very soon, our country –we can declare this with pride–
will have more doctors per capita than any other country in Latin America. Our
universities will continue growing, and the students in our universities will
number in the tens and tens of thousands, and our professors will be
increasingly more experienced. The years are passing, and passing quickly, and
the efforts of the Revolution can be seen.
"We say years, but years that will pass and that will allow us
to witness this spectacle of 40,000 or 50,000 university students and young
people graduating by the thousands and the tens of thousands, because the
Revolution can do this, because the Revolution and only the Revolution is
capable of such feats. And because a revolutionary people and only a
revolutionary people can carry out such tasks.
Today is a day of heartfelt rejoicing, because the Revolution
is not just about putting forward ideas, it is about carrying out ideas. The
Revolution is not theory; it is action, above all. And whatever the Revolution
has proposed to do, it has achieved. Whatever the Revolution has begun, it has
carried on with. And this is the result of ideas turned into reality, of tasks
undertaken and carried out. This is a reason to feel optimistic, a reason to
believe more than ever in the dynamic of the Revolution and in the creative
capacity of our people.
"We know what this signifies. We know that with this we can
defend ourselves from the lowest blows dealt by our enemy in the most sensitive
area for our people. We know that this signifies hundreds of thousands of
children who will be saved for the homeland. It signifies health for our people.
It signifies raising the average life expectancy of every citizen of our
country, the creation of the conditions needed not only to combat diseases, but
also to prevent them. Because in the future, we will have increasingly more
doctors, and increasingly fewer sick people.
"The facts are right there: in the last six months, there has
not been a single case of polio in our country. In the last six months, not a
single mother, not a single family, has had to endure the indescribable pain of
seeing a child left crippled. Hundreds of children have already been saved,
hundreds of happy lives have been saved, and the happiness and joy of hundreds
of families have been saved.
"Once again the Revolution is launching an attack against
diseases, and is preparing to save thousands of lives from tetanus, diphtheria
and whooping cough, diseases that kill thousands of children every year, and can
be caught by any child in any family. And how is this being done? By preventing
these diseases through vaccination. And in this way we will continue to combat
disease after disease, and will go on decreasing the number of epidemics, the
number of deaths, the number of victims. In this way we will work at fulfilling
this worthy goal: to move from therapeutic medicine to preventive medicine.
"The future of our people will no doubt be brilliant, the
health of our people will no doubt be brilliant. On the one hand, we are
combating diseases, decreasing the numbers of their victims, fighting them until
we make them disappear. And at the same time, contingents of enthusiastic youth,
who are the hope of the homeland, forgers of the health of our people, savers of
lives, are entering an institution like this one."
Here I will end my review of the essential points and the
program I addressed that night.
Forty years later, there is almost nothing left to add to these
ideas, drawn up four decades ago, completely fulfilled, and amply surpassed in
many cases.
Here are a few examples:
- In 1958 there were 826 nurses and nursing assistants in the country.
- Today there are 84,232.
- For every nurse in the country in 1958, there are 101 today.
- In 1959 the country had eight modest nursing schools.
- Today there are 24 health care polytechnic institutes where nurses are
trained, 14 nursing colleges, and two intensive training schools for nurses.
These add up to a total of 40 institutions for the training of nurses, who can
then continue their studies and obtain a university degree in nursing.
- Infant mortality in 1959 was estimated at 60 per 1000 live births. The
country ended the year 2001 with a rate of 6.2 per 1000 live births. This
signifies a 90% reduction in infant mortality.
- If the pre-Revolutionary infant mortality rate of 60 per 1000 live births
had persisted, the lives of 479,830 Cuban children would have been lost in the
years that have since passed.
- The average infant mortality rate in Latin America and the Caribbean today
is six times higher than that in Cuba, which has one of the lowest rates in
the world.
- Current life expectancy in the wealthiest and most developed countries in
this hemisphere and Europe: Canada 78.5; United States 76.5; France 78.1;
United Kingdom 77.2; Germany 77.3; Denmark 75.9. Cuba has already reached
76.15. As can be seen, it is on par or close to being on par with these
countries, and the current figure will continue to increase.
- In 1958, there were 6286 doctors in the country. In 1962, only 3960 were
left. There had been an exodus of 2326 by that time, and this number continued
to grow later.
- Of the 157 medical school professors in 1955, only 16 were left in 1962.
- Today the country has 67,128 doctors, which means there is a doctor for
every 167 inhabitants, the highest number of doctors per capita in the world.
- In the wealthiest countries, this figure is one doctor per 358 inhabitants
in the United States; one per 437 in Canada; one per 330 in France; one per
286 in Germany; one per 610 in the United Kingdom. In Latin America, to offer
a few examples, there is one doctor per 538 inhabitants in Mexico, and one per
909 in Chile, a long way off from the rate in Cuba.
- For every doctor that left Cuba between 1959 and 1962 there are 29 doctors
in the country today.
- The current enrollment space in the country’s 22 medical schools is over
40,000 students.
- In the year 1997, we reached a total of 81,016 hospital beds, which meant
7.3 for every 1000 inhabitants.
- As the efforts carried out by the country’s family doctors and nurses
advanced, the number of hospital admissions decreased, and as a result, the
current number of beds is 70,927, which means 61,927 more beds than there were
in public hospitals in 1959. The fundamental factors in the decrease in
hospitalizations are the existence of a healthier population in general and
the introduction in 1984 of home care.
- Between 1999 and July of this year, a total of 2,071,996 people were
treated through home care as opposed to hospitalization.
- Of the 267 hospitals in the country, 62 are in rural areas. Health care
today is based fundamentally on the work of the family doctor offices.
- 4158 of the country’s family doctors work in rural communities, and 974 in
mountain communities.
- The public health care budget for 2002 is 87.3 times greater than in 1958.
- From the beginning of the Revolution until today, 91 countries have
received aid from Cuba, with the participation of 51,059 Cuban health care
workers.
- Today Cuba is providing cooperation to 61 different countries, where 4335
Cuban doctors and health care workers are offering their services. Through the
Comprehensive Health Care Program alone – a program that was developed after
Hurricane Mitch hit Central America and cost the region’s countries tens of
thousands of lives – Cuba is currently providing medical support to 21
countries, with the participation of 2878 doctors and health care technicians.
- At the Latin American Medical School in Havana, there are more than 6000
young people, fundamentally from Latin America, are studying medicine thanks
to scholarships provided by Cuba. There are also hundreds of young people from
Africa, Haiti and elsewhere in the Caribbean studying at other institutions.
- Between 1962 and 2001, a total of 46,463 students attended the Victoria de
Girón Institute of Basic Medical Sciences. Although the vast majority of these
were Cuban, young people from 55 different countries have also studied here.
- There are 1110 workers at the school, of whom 202 are instructors and 32
are researchers.
- There are two Professors Emeritus, 11 Consulting Professors, and 31
Doctors of Sciences, who account for 17% of the teaching faculty.
- 74 members of the faculty have carried out internationalist missions.
In 1981, a brutal and unexpected epidemic of hemorrhagic
dengue, caused by the previously unknown virus type 2, spread throughout the
entire country, affecting 344,203 citizens and taking the lives of 158,
including 101 children with an average age of four. This epidemic constituted a
difficult and severe test for the Cuban health care system. At that time, the
number of doctors was 16,210, four times less than today, yet already four times
greater than the number of doctors in the country in 1962.
With considerable expenditures and a superhuman effort, the
epidemic was beaten, the number of vectors reduced to insignificant figures, and
the virus eradicated from the entire national territory. This event, like yet
another challenge, multiplied the Revolution’s efforts in the health care
sector. This was when the decision was made to create over 15 new medical
schools, in addition to the already existing ones, in order to have a minimum of
one per province; the new political-administrative division meant that the
number of provinces had risen to 14. In the capital and Santiago de Cuba, the
total combined number of medical schools was over six. New advanced techniques
were introduced, new services were created, new hospitals were built, and many
of the already existing hospitals were expanded. Special emphasis was placed on
scientific research centers, a number of which were related to health care.
This was how the country gradually transformed itself into a
genuine medical power. Dozens of measures were applied; truly revolutionary
ideas emerged, including the introduction of the family doctor in cities, rural
communities and mountain communities throughout the country, leading to a health
care system without precedent and unique in the world.
Then came the collapse of the Soviet Union and the socialist
countries of Europe. We fully and abruptly entered the special period. The
people succeeded in the astonishing feat of surviving, but these circumstances
caused considerable damage to the advance of the health care programs in full
development. Proof of the momentum already achieved in the health care sector is
the fact that during the special period, over 30,000 doctors have graduated,
which is almost as many doctors as there were at the beginning of this
period.
Objective and subjective factors contributed to creating and
aggravating difficulties in health care services. Despite the heroic efforts of
a great number of our scientists, doctors, technicians and other workers in the
sector, erratic decisions, bureaucratic regulations, and absurd work schemes
caused considerable damage, which was supposedly due solely to the critical
shortage of material resources and difficulties brought on by the new situation,
combined with the U.S. government’s deliberate and opportunistic intensification
of the blockade and the economic war.
Of all the programs, the one that bore the brunt of the
stupidities committed was the family doctor program, undoubtedly the most
promising of all. Old prejudices and misunderstandings on the part of a number
of specialists and authorities in the sector, combined with measures that
reflected arrogance, mediocrity and incorrect management methods, could have
wiped out some of the best things achieved by Cuban medicine, the sources of its
glory.
The attention paid and measures adopted by our Party’s
leadership, in the face of the difficulties and problems emerging in the midst
of the confusion created by the material shortages, served to prevent even
greater damage from taking place.
In the midst of the battle of ideas we were waging, it became
evident that we needed to deal with situations created by incorrect management
styles and methods and even, in certain cases, commercialization vices that are
unacceptable in the health care services created by the Revolution.
These realities called for changes in the leadership of the
sector, and new conceptions and ideas, in line with the grandiose advances
achieved and the experience accumulated since those glorious and difficult days
when this historic Institute was founded, 40 years ago.
In the new stage now beginning, the enormous wealth of human
resources that has been created and the traditional spirit of sacrifice and
heroism demonstrated by our professionals, technicians and workers in the health
care sector; the extraordinary services they provide in Cuba and abroad; the new
resources and steps made in the production and distribution of medications; the
immediate and crushing offensive that wiped out the latest outbreak of dengue in
just 70 days, at the beginning of this year; the solid defense in the face of
the dangers of increasing contact with travelers from places where the disease
is endemic, and of the threats of new and old diseases that are latent; all of
these things demonstrate and will continue to demonstrate the immense power
achieved by our people, their health care workers, and our medical science
sector.
The effort to achieve excellence in our health care services
will be tenacious and profound. The scope and breadth of the new ideas and
health care projects for the safety and well-being of our people have never even
been dreamt of in our own country or anywhere else. The health care programs
already initiated, although they are more complex and will require more time and
resources than the educational services already on their way to the greatest
heights, will not be detained for even an instant. Working quietly and
suppressing any tendencies towards strident promises and excess publicity,
nothing will prevent our victory, just as nothing has prevented it up until
today.
Long live socialism!
Patria o muerte!
Venceremos!
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