domingo, 26 de abril de 2015

Cuba Increases Control over Its Doctors

Cuba Increases Control over Its Doctors / Cubanet, Roberto Jesus Quinones
Posted on April 25, 2015

The government is trying, among other measures, to curb hiring of its
professionals by foreign clinics

Cubanet, Roberto Jesus Quinones Haces, Guantanamo, 20 April 2015 — The
exodus of Cuban health professional does not stop, and the Ministry of
Public Health (MINSAP) apparently has decided to act to counter a
phenomenon that is damaging domestic medical services but much more the
country's income.

A document attributed to the senior management of MINSAP, adopted in a
meeting held in mid-March of this year, has been making the rounds in
the e-mail of health professionals in which the sector's new policy is
expressed. This event was confirmed to CubaNet by an official from the
Provincial Management of Public Health in Guantanamo, whose identity we
do not reveal for obvious reasons.

The document has 18 instructions. The first three are focused on the
re-organization of services and the re-location of professionals as a
result of the staff review carried out last year.

The other 15 are directed to curbing the exodus of health professionals
through private contracts or other avenues and steering the application
of the measures in each case.

The document

One of the most controversial, instruction number 4, establishes that
Cuban doctors in Angola must be relieved, but without increasing the
collaboration with that country, until its authorities stop handing down
measures that discourage the hiring of Cuban professional in private
clinics or institutions.

Another measure, number 5, directs the withdrawal of the passport, in
the airport itself, of professionals who later return from the
completion of a mission.

Measures 6, 7 and 8 aim to get the private clinics of other countries to
hire Cuban doctors through MINSAP, an agency that claims the right to
review the professional's individual contract, obviously so that the
doctors pay the corresponding tax to the Cuban government and in no way
receive all the money that is due them from the agreed upon wage.

Measure number 10 requires concluding the process of cancelling the
diplomas of the 211 professionals who left service without
authorization, and number 11 directs MINSAP's vice-minister of
International Relations to carry out a study of the existing rules in
the International Labor Organization (ILO), the World Health
Organization (WHO) and the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), as
it relates to the migration of the sector's professionals.

Punishing the "undisciplined"

Rule 12 considers it a serious breach for a health professional to not
return to Cuba upon fulfillment of his mission abroad without good cause
verified by MINSAP, and it requires final separation from the profession
by those who engage in said conduct, with the subsequent withdrawal of
the degree.

Meanwhile, Rule 13 orders the creation of records of disqualification
for those professionals who violate the established procedures for
leaving the country. If any of them repents and returns, Rule 14 directs
that they cannot be re-located in their previous workplace but in an
inferior status.

Another cage for the army of white coats

Rules 16 and 17 of the document are intended to promote meetings with
ambassadors of the countries where Cuban health professionals travel,
largely for the purpose of discouraging their being recruited to remain
and practice in that country.

The heads of Cuban medical teams and ambassadors have received that same
instruction. Besides interfering in the internal affairs of other
countries, this shows one of the thus-far-discouraged facets of Cuban
medical collaboration, which is none other than exerting pressure over
the countries receiving these types of services to make them faithful to
the regime's policy, which is clearly established in instruction number
4 with respect to Angola.

Finally, number 18 establishes a monthly coordination between MINSAP and
the Department of Identification, Migration and Foreign Affairs of the
Interior Ministry so that it will report to MINSAP on the doctors who
leave the country as well as those who have begun proceedings for that
purpose, in order to take appropriate measures.

Being a health professional in Cuba, a doubtful advantage

The above measures show the doubtful advantage of being a health
professional in Cuba, although the same could be said with respect to
other professionals.

Determined to provide the country with qualified personnel, the
government never concerned itself with steadily encouraging the efforts
of the professionals themselves. That explains their massive exodus to
foreign countries and other better paying jobs with the consequential
social loss.

At the dawn of the 21st Century, renowned Cuban professionals have been
subjected to a financial exploitation that not even the fiercest
capitalist would have dared to impose. Paid miserable wages, many times
they sign unfair contracts that the government offers for them to work
abroad because it is the only chance they have of improving their
housing or getting housing, or acquiring a car or having some savings
for their retirement.

In doing so, at a sometimes irreversible familial cost, they damage
their freedom and self-esteem in service to a government for which they
are only a source of income that allows it to continue dominating the
people.

About the Author

Roberto Jesús Quiñones Haces was born in the city of Cienfuegos
September 20, 1957. He is a law graduate. In 1999 he was unjustly and
illegally sentenced to eight years incarceration and since then has been
prohibited from practicing as a lawyer. He has published poetry
collections "The Flight of the Deer" (1995, Editorial Oriente), "Written
from Jail" (2001, Ediciones Vitral), "The Folds of Dawn," (2008,
Editorial Oriente), and "The Water of Life" (2008, Editorial El Mar y La
Montana). He received the Vitral Grand Prize in Poetry in 2001 with his
book "Written from Jail" as well as Mention and Special Recognition from
the Nosside International Juried Competition in Poetry in 2006 and 2008,
respectively. His poems appear in the 1994 UNEAC Anthology, in the 2006
Nosside Competition Anthology and in the selection of ten-line stanzas
"This Jail of Pure Air" published by Waldo Gonzalez in 2009.

Translated by MLK

Source: Cuba Increases Control over Its Doctors / Cubanet, Roberto Jesus
Quinones | Translating Cuba -
http://translatingcuba.com/cuba-increases-control-over-its-doctors-cubanet-roberto-jesus-quinones/

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