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South Africa: Country Welcomes Cuban Doctors

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 29, 2008 at 05:04 PM

South Africa: Country Welcomes Cuban Doctors

Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)

28 April 2008
Posted to the web 29 April 2008

Stephanie Nieuwoudt
Cape Town

For more than a decade, Cuban doctors have filled part of a gap left by 
South African doctors who in large numbers leave the country looking for 
better salaries and employment op****tunities.

According to Fidel Radebe, director of communications for South Africa's 
department of health, there are currently 134 Cuban doctors in the 
country working under a government-to-government agreement between Cuba 
and South Africa.

The first Cuban doctors who came to the country under this agreement 
arrived in 1996 -- two years after the African National Congress (ANC) 
came to power.

Socialist Cuba was a firm sup****ter of the anti-apartheid struggle in 
South Africa, and the ANC and other leftwing movements in South Africa 
always had a natural affinity for Cuba's stated struggle against "neo 
imperialism."

Fast forward to 2008 -- Radebe could not confirm rumours that 
negotiations were underway to bring a new batch of doctors to the 
country. "The department may in future consider the further recruitment 
of Cuban doctors as provided for in the government-to-government 
agreement, but details have not yet been finalised," he said.

IPS asked Radebe about how Cuban doctors have been received in South 
Africa. Some of their patients and colleagues have been harsh in their 
criticism. Patients have complained that some of the doctors are not 
properly trained and that they do not converse fluently in any of South 
Africa's 11 official languages, including English.

This kind of response, however, stands in sharp contrast to a number of 
papers and articles written by academics and journalists that praise the 
Cuban government for its accessible medical system and the high 
standards of training in that country. According to some figures there 
is one doctor for every 170 Cubans -- something South Africa has no hope 
of achieving in the near future with only 74 doctors per 100,000 citizens.

Whatever the criticism, it cannot be denied -- some commentators say -- 
that Cuban doctors have brought invaluable resources to far-flung areas 
of the country where many South African doctors refuse to work due to 
insecurity, remoteness of the area, and a lack of proper salaries.

"These doctors provide an im****tant service in places where only one 
doctor is often on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week," says Mike 
Waters, spokesperson for the opposition Democratic Alliance (DA).

Harald Pakendorf, a former newspaper editor and currently an independent 
political analyst, concurs that Cuban doctors play an im****tant role in 
primary health care in South Africa. He also adds that the government 
should retain doctors, all of whom were trained at great cost to South 
African taxpayers.

"The government should appoint competent hospital administrators who can 
see to things like funding and the purchasing of equipment. Doctors 
should care for their patients. They should not have to worry about the 
availability of things like needles, sutures, swabs and medicines," 
Pakendorf said.

Regarding the criticism that Cuban doctors often lack the necessary 
skills, Radebe says that all doctors have to register with the Health 
Professions Council of South Africa and therefore have to meet certain 
professional standards.

According to Waters, the vacancy rates for medical specialists range 
from 51 percent in the central province of the Free State to a massive 
86 percent in the northern Limpopo Province, near Zimbabwe. And it is in 
these empty spaces that the Cuban doctors are eagerly welcomed.

The situation in the Eastern Cape, South Africa's poorest province, is 
also desperate. Not only is there a lack of general practitioners, but 
there is also a demand for teaching staff at the medical school of the 
Walter Sisulu University in Mthatha. A total of 32 Cuban specialists are 
currently attached to the medical school.

Karuna Krihanlal-Gopal, the acting director of marketing, communications 
and development at the university, says that the Cuban doctor-trainers 
"certainly bring a wealth of experience [to South Africa], having worked 
in similarly challenging cir***stances prior to arriving in the country. 
They are also very dedicated teachers."

In 2007 Cuban doctors with 10 years experience or more who work in South 
African government hospitals and institutions were paid about 3,800 to 
4,400 dollars per month, according to figures released by the DA. 
Relatively speaking, this might seem like a lot, compared to salaries in 
Cuba, but South African doctors emigrating to work in Europe, North 
America or the Antipodes could often treble their salaries by practicing 
overseas.

According to Radebe, several doctors have in the past opted to obtain 
permanent residency and citizen****p in South Africa.

According to the government-to-government agreement, South Africa has 
also sent hundreds of medical students to Cuba to be trained there. From 
1996 to 2007, 470 South Africans had been trained there.

Radebe says that there are many programmes to retain doctors in the 
South African public health system -- "revitalising of hospitals to 
provide a better clinical environment for health professionals, 
improving their conditions of service within the allocated budgets, 
providing better career progression and remuneration dispensations, 
providing specialist training, investing in new technologies and 
improving clinical management."

There are many suggestions on the table. But implementing them is 
another matter. Meanwhile, Cuban doctors are fulfilling a crucial role 
in plugging the hole left by South African doctors who are either 
unwilling to work in far- flung areas or who are themselves seeking 
greener pastures overseas.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200804290006.html
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
South Africa: Country Welcomes Cuban Doctors
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-29 17:04:05 

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