Cuba
In the recent years, Cuba has emerged as a world-class powerhouse of medicine in spite of having limited amount of resources, while the United States consumes over 10 to 20 times of what is essential for a beneficial and affordable healthcare system. Therefore, Cuba has been successful in achieving infant mortality rate lesser than that of the US, especially less than 50 percent of US Blacks. The existing debate over US healthcare system is not relevant to representing a path for poorer countries, such as Cuba, as over 30 percent of the country’s spending is an overhead by various private insurance companies. Such over budget includes a huge amount of over-treatment, which makes the poor sick by rejecting them treatment, creating illness and exposing them to contagious diseases through excess hospitalization and research based on disease rather than prevention. Cuba stands as an example for the world
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Another major advantage of the Cuban healthcare system is that the doctors are a part of the communities in which the patients live, which is sharply distinct from the US, in which healthcare professionals receive no training on assessing the homes of sick patients. Furthermore, the medical aid of Cuba adapts to the political climate of the country, which is distinct from that of the US. It is the initiative of the Cuban government to deploy doctors to undeserved rural areas, unlike the US where there is no political leadership that could control the flow of doctors from countryside to metropolitans. Therefore, Cuban healthcare system is successful for its good accessibility and universal care to every citizen. Cuba also accepts alternative medicine, which is a major reason that adds to the success of the country’s healthcare
The documentary "Sicko" provides an extensive analysis of the different drawbacks of the American healthcare framework. Michael Moore, the director, is upfront with regards to the dissipation of statistical data and portrayal of real-life stories of the healthcare in other nations is better in comparison to that of the US. It is interesting to see the director careful utilize experiences from the Cuba, France, and the UK. A lot of film critics have issued a lot of reviews regarding the significance of the movie in highlighting the real image of the healthcare framework (Zaccagnini & White, 2015, p.110). For example, the illustration of Cuba's health system seems a bit far-fetched to the critics. All in all, Michael Moore does an adequate job in drawing comparisons from the other significant healthcare plans as a way of depicting the ailing form of America's health system.
The time of the Cuban Revolution was a great deal of turmoil, not just in Cuba but in almost every corner of the world. It was 1945, shortly after the end of World War Two, and the Cold War was taking off between the United States and the Soviet Union. Cuba, in the middle of its own war, was caught up in the international politics of the Cold War. The interaction between international and domestic politics played a major role in the outcome of the revolution. The result of the revolution left Fidel Castro in charge of Cuba.
The first order of business for Lansdale was to take an assessment of the state of Cuba. How was it fairing with Castro leading the way for the country. The previous assessments of the United States and how to properly deal with Castro would be determined to no longer be a viable option. This was because that Castro had begun to resonate with more of the Cuban people and the plan to have the United States interject from the outside in would not be successful and it could potentially seem as if the United States is attacking Cuba instead of trying to assist the people of Cuba. The resources at Lansdale’s disposal would be effectively bottomless; the Attorney General would spare no expense on delivering anything that may be needed for the operation.
as defensive medicine practice, new technology, malpractice lawsuit and the uninsured. New technology is the biggest factor of the rising cost of healthcare to treated patient of their illness. New technologies have seemed to be the driving force of high healthcare cost in America. The technology accounts for 38 to 65 percent of healthcare spending in America (Johnson, 2011). The annual spending of health care increased from 75 billion in 1970 to 2.0 trillion in 2005 and is estimated to reach 4.0 trillion in 2015 (Kaiser Foundation, 2013). U.S. citizens spent 5,267 per capita for health care in 2002- 53 percent more than any other country” (2005). “America spent 5267 per capita and in Switzerland they spent 3074 per capita” about 1821 cheaper than ours (Starfield, B 2010). Controlling the technology isn’t easy thing to do because of technology prices are set by manufacturing and the installer of the new medical equipment’s. However, there other way
During Fulgencio Batista’s 26 year reign from 1933 to 1959, access to healthcare for the majority of Cuban citizens was very limited. There were large
In the summer of 2014, as a part of the Global Medical Brigades, I visited and stayed at a small village in Nicaragua for 11 days. While visiting Nicaragua, I was really astonished by the lack of health care as well as, the lack of any health system in particular. Families did not have access to any type of medicine, unless they lived in the village and had money to spend. However, this was not the case for many of the families in the village so several of them suffered and fell ill to diseases and infections. Also, the water was not very clean and access to clean water, once again, could only be found in cities. About 50% of the population lives in poverty in which 85% of this population struggle to live on more than one-dollar daily (Balint 1999). Several communities are limited in their access to basic health services because of poor road infrastructure, which makes transportation and trade tremendously difficult. Historically, each step forward that Nicaragua has taken in the realm of development has been counteracted with a step back in the form of a revolution, natural disasters, repealing of funding for governmental projects or foreign aid. The focus of my research is observing and recording the factors that contribute to the high mortality rate of the Nicaragua populations and how these challenges can be combatted and resolved. My paper will discuss the inaccessibility of health care and why it is difficult to reach among populations that live in poverty and rural
Fidel Castro, inspired by José Martí who first dreamt of a Cuban Revolution who died a martyr before he could succeed, wanted to overthrow the corrupt government under Fulgencio Batista. Castro gathered an army of revolutionaries known as the Fidelistas who were driven by nationalism, idealism, patriotism, and the thought of possibly becoming a martyr, a historical glory of Cuba. The result of this revolution in Cuba was an overthrow of the government and the start of a Communist state that still remains today.
This led to a budget cut of imported medical supplies. After the population’s food consumption dropped one-third and there were insufficient funds for the some of the country’s basic needs, there was an increase in new diseases. There are still continuous shortages of medicines today in Cuba, so the government has been trying to train local doctors to try using herbal medicines to deal with these shortages when they occur. Currently, Cuba has been doing better in its efforts to expand their medicine. They produce as much as two thirds of all types of drugs prescribed there, but they have some problems in purchasing raw materials for some drugs
Cuba is a very diverse country, but it is very poverty-stricken and is still decades
One of the major problems facing our country today is the healthcare crisis. The inequality in our current healthcare system has created a huge gap in the difference between the level and the quality of healthcare that different people receive. Having an improved and reliable health care system available for everyone should be a priority that the government must make available. There are countries whose health care system meets the needs of the patients while there are countries whose health care systems need a great amount of overhaul for them to be able to attend to their patients. In this essay I will discuss the healthcare crisis and the differences in many countries
The United States health care system cumbersome and complex; however, there is opportunity to transform the health care system. By providing seamless, affordable, evidence based and patient centered care that is accessible to all, United States will improve patient and community health outcomes. Nursing is the largest sector of the healthcare field and without a doubt has an essential role in addressing the United States health care system crisis. Care within hospital and community settings has become more complex. This requires nurses to make critical decisions associated with care for sicker, frailer patients and work with sophisticated, life-saving technology. Nurses are also being called upon to fill primary care roles and to help patients manage chronic illnesses, thereby preventing acute care episodes and disease progression.
The current state of United States’ health care system is one of the most polarizing subjects of debate among scholars and other health care professionals across the globe. This can be attributed to the fact that at one extreme end, there are some who argue that that Americans have the best system of health care in the world (MePhee, 2013). Perhaps the availability of the state-of-the-art facilities and free medical technology that have become highly symbolic of the various industries in the United States have motivated the idea of the country’s health care system being unparalleled to others. However, there is a common belief that the fight for universal health care can only be successful if its current state of health care is described as a failure in the modern era as emphasized by MePhee (2013).
There is no doubt that Cuba contains some world class medical facilities and this is seen through the treatment of the 9/11 rescue workers. The audience is persuaded that Cuba possesses better medical facilities than America. Nowhere does the documentary maker mention the flourishing Cuban industry of “health tourism”. A system in which foreigners who are willing to pay cash for anything from brain-surgery to dental work can purchase a level of treatment that’s unavailable to the majority of the Cubans with no hard currency at their disposal. “Cubans should be treated the same as foreigners. Cubans have fewer rights in their own country than foreigners who visit here” (Doctor Hilda
For more than 20 years, Colombia has been trying to revamp its health care system, competing with neighboring countries and top-notch health care systems. In 1993, Colombia, as many developed countries did, introduced a health care system that was meant to cover all of its people. The law, which was known as Law 100, had the objectives to “increase access to healthcare; improve efficiency and quality of services; expand citizen participation” and redefine what a health care system was in terms of risk, behavior, and environmental factors (Bossert et al., 2000). Although the government announced in 2010 that 97% of Colombia’s population was covered by health insurance, either privately or government-funded, there are a lot of obstacles that individuals face, such as health care inequality in access to healthcare and effective use of government resources (Webster, 2012).
It is said that a healthy nation is a wealthy nation. Healthcare is an important concern for every government as people get ill, accidents happen, emergencies arise and the health institutions are needed to diagnose, manage and treat the different types of ailments or diseases that may arise. The healthcare industry is divided into several areas in order to meet the health needs of anyone and everyone. All over the world, the healthcare structures are different to accommodate specific needs of the people in that demographic however the healthcare methodology in Third World Countries does not accommodate the needs of their respective inhabitants in comparison to First world Countries. The Rate of corruption, quality of healthcare institutions, lack of adequate, functional surveillance systems and problematic hygiene conditions are amongst the top reasons why the healthcare systems in third world countries are substandard in comparison to First world nations.