Literature DB >> 15134135

Lessons from the margins of globalization: appreciating the Cuban health paradox.

Jerry M Spiegel1, Annalee Yassi.   

Abstract

It is widely recognized that Cuba, despite poor economic performance, has achieved and sustained health indices comparable to those in developed countries--the Cuban Paradox. There has been, however, remarkably little scholarship evaluating how this has been accomplished, especially during a period of extreme economic hardship. Cuba's exclusion from the mainstream of "globalization," moreover, allows us to gain insights into the population health impact of policies that have accompanied globalization. Cuba's experience challenges the conventional assumption that generating wealth is the fundamental precondition for improving health. As peoples around the world search for cost-effective ways to improve well-being, they might want to learn how alternative public policy approaches, such as those used in Cuba, may be effective. We therefore reviewed the literature on the health-wealth relationship in this globalizing era; then systematically examined public policy in Cuba, not only for health services (financing, vertical and horizontal integration, prevention and primary-care focus, inter-sectoral linkages, etc.) but for non-medical determinants of health as well. These included education, housing, nutrition, employment, etc. plus the community mobilization and social cohesion that the Cuban system has generated. It appears that the active implementation of public policy affecting a wide variety of health determinants explains the Cuban paradox, and that the international community can learn from Cuba's experience. The prospect for healthy public policy can thus exist within, rather than only on the margins of globalization. The importance of monitoring how Cuba sustains such policies as it faces growing challenges in this globalizing era is increasingly worth observing.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15134135     DOI: 10.1057/palgrave.jphp.3190007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Public Health Policy        ISSN: 0197-5897            Impact factor:   2.222


  14 in total

1.  No Child or Mother Left Behind; Implications for the US from Cuba's Maternity Homes.

Authors:  Michelle Bragg; Taraneh R Salke; Carol P Cotton; Debra Anne Jones
Journal:  Health Promot Perspect       Date:  2012-07-01

2.  Challenging the neoliberal trend: the Venezuelan health care reform alternative.

Authors:  Carles Muntaner; René M Guerra Salazar; Sergio Rueda; Francisco Armada
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2006 Nov-Dec

3.  Learning together: a Canada-Cuba research collaboration to improve the sustainable management of environmental health risks.

Authors:  Jerry Spiegel; Maricel Garcia; Mariano Bonet; Annalee Yassi
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2006 Jan-Feb

4.  Thomas McKeown, Meet Fidel Castro: Physicians, Population Health and the Cuban Paradox.

Authors:  Robert G Evans
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2008-05

5.  Asymptotic medicine.

Authors:  Karmen Loncarek
Journal:  Croat Med J       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 1.351

6.  Infectious disease management: lessons from cuba.

Authors:  Noni E Macdonald; Beth Halperin; Enrique Beldarrain Chaple; Jeff Scott; John M Kirk
Journal:  Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 2.471

7.  Continuing the dialogue on health: insights from the 2010 APHA Delegation to Cuba.

Authors:  Angie Denisse Otiniano Verissimo; Donya Currie
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-05-16       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  Translating genomics: cancer genetics, public health and the making of the (de)molecularised body in Cuba and Brazil.

Authors:  Sahra Gibbon
Journal:  Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos       Date:  2016 Jan-Mar

9.  Depression in Racial and Ethnic Minorities: the Impact of Nativity and Discrimination.

Authors:  Henna Budhwani; Kristine Ria Hearld; Daniel Chavez-Yenter
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2014-09-11

10.  BRCA patients in Cuba, Greece and Germany: Comparative perspectives on public health, the state and the partial reproduction of 'neoliberal' subjects.

Authors:  Sahra Gibbon; Eirini Kampriani; Andrea Zur Nieden
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2010-11-22
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