San Francisco Chronicle

Cuban doctors fight outbreak around globe

- By Andrea Rodriguez Andrea Rodriguez is an Associated Press writer.

HAVANA — For two years, the Trump administra­tion has been trying to stamp out one of Cuba’s signature programs — stateemplo­yed medical workers treating patients around the world in a show of soft power that also earns billions in badly needed hard currency.

Labeling the doctors and nurses as both exploited workers and agents of communist indoctrina­tion, the U.S. has notched a series of victories as Brazil, Ecuador and Bolivia sent home thousands after leftist government­s allied with Havana were replaced with ones friendlier to Washington.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has brought a reversal of fortune for Cuban medical diplomacy, as doctors have flown off on new missions to battle COVID19 in at least 14 countries including Italy and the tiny principali­ty of Andorra on the Spanish-French border, burnishing the island’s internatio­nal image in the middle of a global crisis.

“I am aware of the position of the United States, but we are a sovereign country and we can choose the partners with which we are going to have cooperatio­n,” Andorran Foreign Minister Mara Ubach said.

In the city of Crema in the hardhit Lombardy region of northern Italy, 52 Cuban doctors and nurses set up a field hospital with 32 beds equipped with oxygen and three ICU beds.

“This is a strongly symbolic moment because the Crema hospital has been going through an extremely complicate­d situation from the start,” Lombardy’s top social welfare official, Giulio Gallera, said at the inaugurati­on last week. “The number of patients who have filled and continue to fill the emergency room and department­s has truly put the medical personnel to a hard test.”

The Trump administra­tion has sought to cut off income to Havana as part of a longterm tightening of sanctions. And it continues to discourage countries from contractin­g Cuban medical workers despite the pandemic, arguing that their pay and conditions fall short of industry standards.

Cuba currently has about 37,000 medical workers in 67 countries, most in longstandi­ng missions. Some doctors have been sent as part of free aid missions, but many countries pay the government directly for their services. In some other cases internatio­nal health bodies have paid.

The most recent deployment­s of at least 593 doctors from the Henry Reeve Brigade — founded by Fidel Castro in 2005 and named after a 19th century American volunteer who fought for Cuban independen­ce from Spain — have also been to Suriname, Jamaica, Dominica, Belize, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Kitts and Nevis, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, some of them reinforcin­g existing medical missions.

Havana has said it receives about $6 billion a year from the export of public services, and medical services make up most of that. When Brazil expelled Cuban doctors in 2018, a few details emerged including that the country had been paying $3,100 per month for each doctor with 70% of that going into the pockets of the Cuban government.

Doctors typically make less than $100 per month working on the island, so doing an overseas mission means a significan­t pay hike even if those salaries remain low by internatio­nal standards.

 ?? Yamil Lage / AFP via Getty Images ?? Doctors and nurses of the Henry Reeve Brigade pose with a portrait of the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro in Havana on March 21 before traveling to Italy.
Yamil Lage / AFP via Getty Images Doctors and nurses of the Henry Reeve Brigade pose with a portrait of the late Cuban leader Fidel Castro in Havana on March 21 before traveling to Italy.

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