|
Dear members
of the medical force assembled to offer assistance
to those affected by hurricane Katrina in the
South of the United States;
Distinguished guests;
Fellow
Cubans:
Hardly 48
hours ago I concluded my remarks on the Round
Table broadcast where I once again explicitly
offered the United States to send a medical force
with the necessary means to offer emergency
assistance to the tens of thousands of Americans
trapped in the flooded areas and the ruins Katrina
left behind after lashing Louisiana and other
southern states.
It was clear
to us that those who faced the greatest danger
were these huge numbers of poor, desperate people,
many elderly citizens with health situations,
pregnant women, mothers and children among them,
all in urgent need of medical care.
In such a
situation, regardless of how rich a country may
be, the number of scientists it has or how great
its technical breakthroughs have been, what it
needs are young, well-trained and experienced
professionals, who have done medical work in
anomalous circumstances, and that, with a minimum
of resources, can be immediately transported by
air or any other available means to specific
facilities or sites where the lives of human
beings are in danger.
Cuba, a
short distance away from Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama, was in a position to offer assistance
to the American people. At that moment, the
billions of dollars the United States could
receive from countries all over the world would
not have saved a single life in New Orleans and
other critical areas where people were in mortal
danger. Cuba would be completely powerless to help
the crew of a spaceship or a nuclear submarine in
distress, but it could offer the victims of
hurricane Katrina, facing imminent death,
substantial and crucial assistance. And this is
what it’s been doing since Tuesday, August 30, at
12:45 pm, when the winds and downpours had barely
ceased. We don’t regret it in the least, even if
Cuba was not mentioned in the long list of
countries that offered their solidarity to the US
people.
Knowing that
I could rely on men and women like you, I took the
liberty of reiterating our offer three days later,
promising that in less than 12 hours the first 100
doctors, carrying the necessary medical resources
in their backpacks, could be in Houston; that an
additional 500 could be there 10 hours later and
that, within the next 36 hours, 500 more, for a
total of 1100, could join them to save at least
one of the many lives at risk from such dramatic
events.
Perhaps
those unaware of our people’s sense of honor and
spirit of solidarity thought this was some kind of
bluff or a ridiculous exaggeration. But our
country never toys with matters as serious as
this, and it has never dishonored itself with
demagogy or deceit. That is why we proudly gather
in this hall, at Havana’s Convention Center where
only three days ago we observed a minute of
silence for the victims of the hurricane which
battered the United States, and from where our
heartfelt condolences were extended to that
brotherly people.
Here we are,
and not 1100 but 1586 doctors, including 300
additional doctors, in response to the
increasingly alarming news that keep coming in. In
fact, another 300 doctors, approximately, have
joined this group at the last minute. They were
called in and we’ve already announced that we are
willing to send thousands more if it were
necessary. But these 300 doctors are in other
halls of the Convention Center, taking part in
this function. In just 24 hours, all of the
doctors summoned to carry out this mission, coming
from all parts of the country, met in the capital.
We have shown the utmost punctuality and
precision.
You bring
honor to the noble medical profession. With your
quick, unwavering response to the call of duty and
your willingness to work in unchartered and
difficult conditions, you are writing a new page
in the history of solidarity among the peoples and
are showing a course of peace to the suffering and
imperiled human species to which we all belong.
This medical
force, I mean the 1586 initially mentioned,
includes:
· 1097
specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine, 600
of whom are pursuing Masters degrees in Medical
Sciences;
· 351
general practitioners and intensive care
specialists;
· 72
healthcare professionals with two medical
specialties, and
· 66
specialists in cardiology, pediatrics,
gastroenterology, surgery, psychiatry,
epidemiology and other specialties.
Of this
medical force:
· 699
doctors have served in one or more international
missions in 43 different countries, and some have
even served in three missions, and
· 727 were
ready and about to leave Cuba to serve in missions
in Latin America, Africa and Asia; they joined
this force in view of the dramatic situation
unfolding in the southern United States, while
other similar professionals will meet our
internationalist commitment in other countries.
The average
age of these health professionals is 32 years.
Most of them had not yet been born when the
revolution triumphed and some had not even been
born 15 years after the triumph of the revolution,
they are the product of these hard years. The
average work experience is of no less than 10
years. Some have more experience, some less, most
have more experience.
Of the total
force, 729 are men and 857 are women.
The
precarious sanitary conditions and dangers left in
the United States by hurricane Katrina are
powerfully described by international press
agencies and the US press:
The EFE
agency reports that in the Houston’s stadium, in
Texas, presently sheltering more than 15 thousand
people evacuated from New Orleans, hardly three
thousand have received medical care. Highly
infectious diseases have been reported there while
outbreaks of diarrhea and vomiting threaten to
quickly spread due to overcrowding.
Yesterday’s
edition of the Washington Post reports that, at
the moment, Mississippi’s chief needs are fuel and
medical assistance.
An AP press
dispatch reports that two of the most severely
affected hospitals in New Orleans were evacuated
after its desperate doctors spent two days making
the difficult decision of which patients should
receive the scarce supplies of food, water and
medicine. Three terminally-ill patients died
during the evacuation and the number of patients
who perished before assistance finally arrived
could not be determined. Several hospital
employees administered themselves intravenous
saline solutions while waiting to be rescued.
Fox News
network emphasized yesterday that New Orleans
health professionals are working around the clock,
without rest, to treat patients in critical
condition and to prevent a catastrophe in the
already overcrowded medical facilities. These
health professionals have been working without
rest and their strength is running out; something
must be done urgently.
Yesterday, a
Louisiana Health and Hospitals Department
spokesperson, Kyle Viator, declared that "we have
patients in dialysis, others with diabetes, people
who require regular treatment and prescription
drugs. Our resources are running out. At the
moment, one third of the population is displaced,
and this group of people includes our medical
personnel".
An article
published in the Spanish newspaper El Mundo
gathers the dramatic accounts of Nina Ferguson, a
46-year-old African American resident of New
Orleans, who claims she could not suppress a
feeling of nausea on getting off a military truck
which took her to Houston, adding: "Seeing this,
I’d rather stayed at the Convention Center where I
saw dehydrated babies and several old people die
without anyone looking after them".
Another New
Orleans resident, Rosanne Asuen, who suffers from
diabetes and obesity, had to be reanimated by a
volunteer nurse who was as desperate to get out of
there as she was.
Evelyn
Sander, a 23 years old mother, told the press how
she wiped the sweat off Issaiah, her one-month-old
baby’s forehead, with symptoms of dehydration and
flies all over him.
The United
Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
(UNICEF) in a communiqué made public yesterday,
Saturday, expressed its concern over the situation
of children in the affected areas. According to
UNICEF, one third to one fourth of the one million
two hundred thousand people left helpless in
Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama are children.
A
spokesperson for the Center for Disease Control
(CDC) headquartered in Atlanta told EFE that the
stagnant waters create the ideal conditions for
the spread of the Nile virus and for outbreaks of
hepatitis A and E. Coli bacteria, a potentially
deadly pathogen which can cause diarrhea and
kidney failure, among other complications.
An AFP cable
dated in Houston yesterday reports that Texas
offered to take in the thousands of people who had
been displaced, but that hotels in Houston begin
to experience water shortages and that the ill
must wait long to receive medical care. Steven
Glonsky, a doctor with the Methodist Hospital in
the city, who spent thirteen hours attending to
dehydrated and traumatized survivors who suffer
from chronic illness such as diabetes and
hypertension, stated that this is an unprecedented
crisis in US history.
US Senate
republican leader Bill Frist, presently in New
Orleans, admitted that "doctors and nurses are
doing a great job, but the distribution of medical
assistance continues to be a serious problem" and
"scores of people die every day".
According to
the Boston Globe, Louisiana and Mississippi are
facing the worst public health care disaster the
nation has known in decades.
The
newspaper published declarations from Dr. Marshall
Bouldin, Director for Diabetes and Metabolism at
the University’s Medical Center in Jackson,
Mississippi, who assistance: "We’re seeing things
that we haven’t seen in many years: cholera,
typhoid fever, tetanus, malaria. We hadn’t seen
such conditions in 50 years. People are crammed
together and wander around surrounded by
excrement".
There is an
endless list of health problems reported by
virtually all the press and the specialized health
care institutions.
Our doctors’
backpacks contain precisely those resources needed
to address in the field problems relating to
dehydration, high blood pressure, diabetes
Mellitus and infections in all parts of the body
-lungs, bones, skin, ears, urinary tract,
reproductive system- as they arise. They also
carry medicine to suppress vomiting; painkillers
and drugs to lower fever; medication for the
immediate treatment of heart conditions, for
allergies of any kind; for treating bronchial
asthma and other similar complications, about
forty products of proven efficiency in emergencies
such as this one.
These
professionals carry two backpacks containing these
products; each backpack weighs 12 kilograms.
Actually, this was determined when all of the
backpacks were procured, since although they are
quite large, only half of the supplies would fit
in; it was then necessary to give each doctor two
backpacks, and the small briefcase which carries
diagnostic kits. These doctors have much clinical
experience, this is one of their most outstanding
characteristic, as they are used to offering their
services in places where there isn’t even one
X-ray machine, ultrasound equipment or instruments
for analyzing fecal samples, blood, etc. With the
increase in the number of doctors, the medications
weigh a total of 36 tons. The initial figure was
smaller.
Cuba has the
moral authority to express its opinion on this
matter and to make this offer. Today, it is the
country with the highest number of doctors per
capita in the world, and no other country
cooperates with other nations in the field of
healthcare as extensively as it does.
Of over 130
thousand healthcare professionals with a
university education, 25,845 today serve in
international missions in 66 different countries.
They offer medical services to 85,154,748 people;
34,700,000 in Latin America and the Caribbean and
50,400,000 in Africa and Asia. Of these, 17,651
are doctors, 3,069 are dentists and 3,117 are
healthcare technicians who work in optic services
and other areas.
Today, more
than 12 thousand young people from around the
world, chiefly from Latin America and the
Caribbean, are studying medicine in Cuba
completely free of charge, and their numbers will
continue to grow rapidly. Scores of young people
from the United States study in the Latin American
School of Medicine, whose doors have been opened,
since the institution’s inception, to students
from that country.
Today, I
received a moving letter from graduates from that
Center, which reads:
"Your
Excellency Commander Fidel Castro Ruz;
"Dear
Commander in Chief:
"We have
followed the horrific events that have unfolded in
New Orleans resulting from the devastation caused
by hurricane Katrina and listened to your
statement on the afternoon Round Table program and
we, Hondurans and other graduates from the Latin
American School of Medicine (ELAM), are moved by
the situation our brothers in the United States
are enduring. Thus, as victims of a natural
disaster (hurricane Mitch) ourselves, we want to
express our solidarity with the American people at
this tragic hour and join the doctors you have
offered to send to this sister nation in response
to this critical situation. You can be confident
that we are ‘doctors willing to go where we are
most needed’.
"We walk
down the path you dream of.
"With
infinite love and eternal gratitude,
"The first
graduates from ELAM".
This letter
is signed by 85 young, recent graduates from the
Latin American School of Medicine, who tell us the
signatures and names are those of comrades
currently in Havana, and that there are more
comrades willing to join the mission but who are
overseas on vacation.
When our
first war of independence broke out in 1868, a
group of Americans joined the ranks of Cuba’s
independence forces. One of them, a very young
man, stood out for his exceptional courage and
wrote pages of admirable heroism in Cuba’s
history. It was Henry Reeve. His unforgettable
name is forever etched in the heart of our people,
and next to that of Lincoln and other illustrious
Americans it is carved on the pillars of the Plaza
built in the days of the struggle for the return
of little Eliلn Gonzلlez, when the noble people of
the United States played a decisive role so that
justice would finally be done.
Henry Reeve,
almost crippled by the wounds sustained in the
course of 7 years of war, fell in combat on August
4, 1876, near Yaguaramas, today the province of
Cienfuegos.
I propose
that this force of Cuban doctors who have
volunteered to help save the lives of Americans
bear the glorious name of "Henry Reeve".
These
doctors, I mean you, could already be there,
offering their services. 48 hours have passed and
we have not received any response to our
reiterated offer. We shall patiently await a
reply, for as many days as necessary. In the
meantime, our doctors shall use the time to take
intensive epidemiology courses and improving their
English. If, ultimately, we do not receive any
reply or our cooperation -your cooperation- is not
needed, we shall not be demoralized, not you, not
us, not any Cuban. On the contrary, we shall feel
satisfied for having complied with our duty and
extremely happy knowing that no other American, of
the many that suffered the painful and perfidious
scourge of hurricane Katrina, shall perish from
lack of medical care, if that were the reason our
doctors were not there.
The "Henry
Reeve" Brigade has been created, and whatever
tasks you undertake in any part of the world or
our own homeland, you shall always bear the
glorious distinction of having responded to the
call to assistance our brothers and sisters in the
United States, and that nation’s humblest children
especially, with courage and dignity.
Let’s go
forward, generous defenders of health and of life,
winners over pain and death itself!
Thank you.
(AIN) 5 September 2005 |