Newly graduated doctors of the
2004-5 course;
Members of the ‘Henry Reeve’
brigade;
Health professionals who have
completed glorious international missions;
Students in their fourth, fifth
and sixth years at the Faculties of Medical Sciences in the
Capital;
Students of the Latin American
School of Medicine;
Young students of Nursing and
Health Technology;
Professors, relatives and
guests;
Compatriots:
The number of Latin American and
Caribbean students from countries in South, Central and North
America graduating from the Latin American School of Medicine,
together with the young Cubans who graduate here today, amounts to
3,515 new doctors who will be at the service of our peoples and
the world.
This figure will increase until
ten thousand doctors are graduated every year, to meet our
commitment of training one hundred thousand doctors from Latin
America and the Caribbean in Cuba in ten years, under the
principles of ALBA, signed between Cuba and Venezuela, which will
contribute an equal number, in an unwavering attempt to integrate
our peoples.
Graduating as a doctor is like
opening a door to a long road leading to the noblest action that a
human being can do for others.
Although every person and every
people has the right to a healthy life and to enjoy the privilege
of a long and useful existence, the richest, most developed
societies, ruled by consumerism and a thirst for profit, have made
the health service into a common business, inaccessible to the
poorest sectors of the population. In many Third World countries
this service barely exists, and between developed countries and
the euphemistically called ‘developing countries’ the
differences are vast.
While statistics speak of
developed countries with child mortality rates lower than 10 for
1000 life births, and some boast a life expectancy that reaches or
surpasses 80 years of age, others, such as many African countries,
have to settle for child mortality rates of over 100 for children
under one year of age and often 150 for 1000 life births, and a
decreasing life expectancy rate that in some countries fluctuates
between 30 and 40 years of age. While the world watches this
happen, military spending amounts to one trillion dollars every
year, a figure only comparable to one other absurd expense, that
is, commercial publicity, which also equals one trillion. Either
of these sums, invested wisely year after year, would be more than
enough to ensure that all the people of the world lived a decent
life.
Neither the climate nor genetic
potential are causing this tragedy. Cuba, a tropical country, with
a hot and humid climate, a favorable environment for viruses,
bacteria and fungus, whose population is a mixture of ethnicities,
subjected to a cruel blockade and economic war for almost half a
century, has, despite all this, an infant mortality rate of less
than 6 for 1000 life births under one year of age, a rate that
falls just below that of Canada, and is headed towards 5 and maybe
even less than 4 in the near future, which will put Cuba in first
place in the continent. Furthermore, it will take our country half
the time it took Sweden and Japan to raise life expectancy from 70
to 80 years, as it today stands at 77.5 years of age. Its medical
services have increased this expectancy by almost 18 years, from a
rate of approximately 60 years at the time of the triumph of the
Revolution in January 1959.
These words might sound
presumptuous if it were not possible to rightly describe our
Homeland today as the country that has done more than any other
nation in the world to share its medical expertise and experience
with other peoples.
Not once, throughout the
selfless history of the Revolution, have our people failed to
offer its supportive medical assistance to other nations in need
of this aid at times when catastrophes have hit them, regardless
of wide ideological and political differences, or the serious
insults received from the government of any of these countries.
Our concept of the humane
condition of the peoples and the duty of brotherhood and
solidarity has never been, nor will they ever be, betrayed.
Tens of thousands of Cuban
doctors and healthcare professionals stationed around the world
are irrefutable proof of what I am saying. For them, there will
never be any language barriers, sacrifice, danger or obstacles. It
is now 43 years since Cuba sent its first brigade to Algeria, a
country that had only just freed itself from colonialism following
a heroic struggle for independence.
After more than four decades,
and with the special period drawing to an end, the healthcare
system has become the most important sector in the exchange of
goods and services between our country and the rest of the world
in economical terms; but despite this Cuba has not failed to offer
its medical assistance completely free of charge to more than 60
Third World countries lacking economic resources. That is how it
has always been and how it always will be.
Nothing that I have said,
however, can match the Comprehensive Healthcare Programs created
following the devastation caused by Hurricane Mitch in Central
America in 1998, which killed tens of thousands of children and
adults, mostly the poor and vulnerable.
We promised to send enough
doctors to save as many lives each year as were taken by the
hurricane. At that time, almost immediately afterwards, the Latin
American School of Medicine, ELAM, was established. The
comprehensive program was extended to other nations in Latin
America and the Caribbean and quickly reached many far away
countries in Africa. Today, even East Timor, far away in Oceania,
is included in the Cuban Comprehensive Healthcare Program.
There are now 12,000 students at
ELAM. Just two months ago the first 1,610 students graduated. Many
Prime Ministers and senior officials from the region attended that
ceremony, among them was our close friend Hugo Chavez, President
of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, a country to which we are
bound by indestructible historical ties and by the common struggle
for the full independence and integration of our peoples.
Both of us, in the name of the
peoples of Venezuela and Cuba, are deeply committed to supporting
healthcare, literacy, education, Mission Miracles, PETROCARIBE,
ELECTROCARIBE, the struggle against HIV and other important social
and economic programs with a strong humane and integration
component in our region.
The enormous task of preserving
and restoring the sight to no less than six million people from
Latin America and the Caribbean, and of training 200 thousand
healthcare professionals in 10 years, is completely unprecedented.
However, I am convinced that
these programs will be bettered. On June 30, it was suggested that
Mission Miracle be extended to other countries in the Caribbean.
Today, 81 days later, I can say here that the number of people
from the Caribbean who have undergone eye surgery is now 4,212 and
the number of Venezuelan brothers and sisters who have been
operated on so far this year is 79,450, which combine for a total
83,662 patients.
The great progress made in this
field by our country will reach other sister nations in our region
by way of the young professionals who are beginning to graduate
from the Latin American School of Medicine.
It is a fact that the medical
assistance given by Cuba and its scientific institutions to other
parts of the world is spreading rapidly in the interest of
humanity. There is nothing strange about the behavior of Cuba,
which did not hesitate to offer the people of the United States
the immediate dispatch of experienced doctors with the essential
resources needed to administer emergency care to people in mortal
danger following a serious natural disaster. Also, our country was
closest to the area hit by the hurricane and was in the position
to send over human and material aid in a matter of hours. It was
as if a big American cruise ship with thousands of passengers
aboard were sinking in waters close to our coast.
We could not remain indifferent.
No-one would believe that this aid could be taken as an offence or
a humiliation. Our message was sent to the federal authorities of
the United States just after Katrina, with her devastating force,
battered New Orleans. It hurts to think that maybe some of those
desperate people, trapped by the water and at death’s door,
could have been saved. It is a harsh lesson for those whose false
pride and mistaken concepts led them to decide not to respond,
even belatedly, to our offer, which isn’t the first time in
these circumstances.
Some have tried to justify this
behavior, citing Cuba’s decision to reject the ridiculous
financial offer of 50 thousand dollars, which, due to obvious
historical and moral reasons, in the midst of a blockade which has
cost tens of billions of dollars, as well as the harassment and
aggression of half a century that has cost the lives of thousands
of people, we had to reject. We didn’t offer money, we were
offering to save lives, and our offer still stands today and the
next day, as it is and always will be Cuba’s practice towards
any country in the world.
We discussed this issue publicly
because on the long list of countries that offered help, the name
of Cuba was omitted, which confused and even startled many friends
of our country around the world. We explained this on September 2,
three days after making our offer, specifying that we were
prepared to send 1,100 doctors by air, in a period of between 12
and 36 hours, with 24 tons of essential medications in their
backpacks; 48 hours went by, and on September 4, that force
already composed of 1,586 professionals and ready to leave with 36
tons of medication, was meeting at the Convention Center where it
was given the name of ‘Henry Reeve’ Medical Force, in memory
of that exceptional young American combatant who died fighting for
Cuba’s independence.
During the night of September
12, a press release was delivered to the Granma newspaper and
published the following day, where it was reported that
the graduation of doctors from the 2004-5 course would take place
at 5 pm on September 19 in La Plaza de la Banderas in the Latin
American School of Medicine. But the weather forced us to change
the venue. It was also reported, and I quote, that:
"On this day a so far
unprecedented organization will be formed: the International
Contingent of Doctors Specialized in Disaster Situations and
Serious Epidemics. This will take the place of the Medical Force
formed to help the people of the United States when Katrina hit
the south of this country with all its brutal force. Its aim will
not just be to help a certain nation, but to give immediate
assistance, with its specially trained staff, to any country that
suffers a catastrophe, particularly those that are hit by
hurricanes, floods or other natural phenomena of this severity. It
will carry the same name as the Medical Force, formed as a
response to the tragedy which has just befallen the people of the
United States, and that is ‘Henry Reeve’."
By then, 14 days had gone by
without any reply to our offer.
During the night of Wednesday,
September 14, I met again with all the members of that force, who
were in the process of deepening their knowledge, in order to
inform them of the statement made by the Governor of Louisiana,
which had been received in Cuba that very same day, and the
message sent by Bruno Rodríguez, First Deputy Minister of Foreign
Affairs, the content of which I shall read out now, word for word,
so that you may all know about it.
"Honorable Kathleen
Babineaux Blanco, Governor of the state of Louisiana.
"Madame Governor:
"We have carefully read
your Executive Order No. KBB 2005-33 establishing the ‘Declaration
of Public Health Emergency and Suspension of In-State Licensure
for Medical Professionals and Personnel Licensed Out-of-State’,
quoting that ‘… although scores of people have been rescued,
there are many more persons waiting for rescue, evacuation and
medical assistance, and many citizens have suffered or will suffer
injury and/or illness…’. The Declaration also states that
‘…the number of medical professionals and personnel currently
available to the state to respond to this emergency are
insufficient and there is a need to immediately supplement their
number in order to serve those affected by this disaster…’"
"I would like to
communicate to you that the necessary Cuban personnel, up to 1,586
qualified and experienced physicians, carrying the appropriate
medicines that the new circumstances may dictate, that was offered
to the United States to assist the population and relieve the
suffering of the victims of Hurricane Katrina, stands ready to fly
immediately to the State of Louisiana as soon as you have the
corresponding authorization from the federal authorities.
Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla,
a.i."
Now, it is September 19, another
five days have passed and the federal authorities haven’t said a
word. There is, therefore, growing reason to believe that on this
occasion the generous and timely offer made by our people will not
be accepted.
As the tragedy experienced by
the world is increasingly evident, we confirm today, September 19,
2005, the decision to create the ‘Henry Reeve’ Contingent.
This brigade will be primarily composed of members of the current
force bearing this name. Successive members will be 200 volunteers
from the current graduation of doctors, 200 from the previous
graduation of 2003-4, 600 students in their sixth year of Medicine
from the 2005-6 course, and 800 in their fifth year from this same
course. Later, others will follow. Nobody should feel left out.
The tens of thousands of
specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine, as well as Cuban
Nursing graduates and healthcare professionals who are presently
on missions abroad, or who have completed them, represent an
infinite reserve for the ‘Henry Reeve’ Contingent.
Regardless of the knowledge that
they have as general practitioners, the youngest, or the
specialists in Comprehensive General Medicine, which will be the
majority, or in other specialties, and wherever they carry out
their functions, be it in our country or another part of the
world, all members of the Contingent must posses a solid knowledge
of epidemiology and illnesses associated with catastrophes, and
must master two of the most common languages; be physically able
and, depending on the case, have the will and preparation
necessary to be transferred quickly by different means to the
place where they are urgently needed. Young Latin American and
Caribbean graduates of ELAM, including Americans studying there,
may also join this glorious organization, which is the first of
its kind in the history of humanity increasingly in need of
cooperation and solidarity.
The ‘Henry Reeve’ Contingent
can do more than just help the population in the event of a
hurricane, flood and other similar natural disasters. Certain
epidemics represent real natural and social disasters. Suffice it
to mention, the Hemorrhagic Dengue, which is attacking a growing
number of countries in Latin America, and whose symptoms are
particularly fatal to children, and other old and new grave
illnesses. We can and must find the most efficient ways to combat
these diseases. There is a particularly terrible epidemic –let’s
call it that-- which has the world in its grip: HIV, AIDS. It is
threatening to wipe out entire nations and even vast continental
regions.
Cuba ranks highly on the world
scale of countries preventing and struggling against this disease.
Looking at the rates that prevail in this part of the world, it
can be noted that some countries with an average infestation rate,
had in 2003 –the last year for published statistics-- an AIDS
prevalence of 2.4%, 2.3%, 3.2% in the adult population aged
between 15 and 49 years. I’m not mentioning any names for
obvious reasons. In other countries the infestation rate is much
higher still. The lowest rate after Cuba is 0.6%. I’ll not say
who that is either. The rate in Cuba is 0.07%, that is to say, 8.6
times less than in the country with the second lowest rate.
Our doctors, our scientists, our
pharmacists, and in particular the members of the ‘Henry Reeve’
Contingent, must know all there is to know about AIDS, the most
efficient ways to combat it, and above all they should realize
that these methods must be adapted to the specific conditions of
each country.
When the immensely rich
developed nations decide to truly cooperate with countries in
Africa and other parts of the world in the struggle against AIDS,
they will need professionals like those in the ‘Henry Reeve’
Contingent. It is then that the value of this action will be
understood in all its magnitude. The rich, developed states posses
the financial capital, but they don’t have the human capital. In
order to avoid transmission from mother to child, for example, it
is necessary to perform a Caesarian section on the mother; the
mothers live in the villages and the doctors from the developed
world don’t go into the African villages, they have not been
trained for that.
It is necessary to train the
doctors needed in the countryside, in the villages, in the poor
and marginalized neighborhoods of Third World cities. Even in
extremely rich countries like the United States, tens of millions
of Afro-Americans, Indians, Latin American immigrants, Haitians
and many others have no healthcare programs or medical care.
We are offering to train
professionals who are prepared to struggle against death. We shall
prove that there is a solution to many of the planet’s
tragedies. We are proving that man can and must better himself. We
are proving the value of conscience and ethics. We are offering
life.
Long live the protectors of life
who graduate today!
Long live the doctors capable of
defeating death!
Long live the glorious ‘Henry
Reeve’ International Contingent!