Timeline of healthcare in Cuba

This is a timeline of healthcare in Cuba, focusing on the modern state. Some international campaigns outside of local healthcare are also described.

Big picture

Year/period

Key developments

Prior to 1960

Pre-Revolution era. Health services and facilities are concentrated in the cities. Provision of medical supplies is heavily dependent on imports from other countries, mostly the U.S. Private sector healthcare is primarily for the wealthy. A poorly funded and staffed public sector responds for the rest of the population.

1960s

Soon after the revolution, universal healthcare is adopted and becomes a priority of state planning. U.S. government imposes embargo against Cuba, which would lead to an increase in disease and infant mortality during this decade. Approximately half the physicians in Cuba emigrate.

1970s

The polyclinic model of primary care is reinforced and expanded, focusing on health education, prevention and environmental monitoring. The number of medical graduates increase, thus enlarging the Cuban medical internationalism program.

1980s

Cuban healthcare system consolidates. Primary care is given impetus with the introduction of the Family Doctor-and-Nurse Program. Biotechnology industry takes off.

1990s

Post Soviet era, starts with Cuba's Special Period of socioeconomic collapse, due to loss of funding from the dissolved U.S.S.R. Cuba starts to accept U.S. donations of food, medicines and cash. At the same time, U.S. embargo tightens. Infectious diseases rise while infant mortality continues to decline.

2000s–present

Cuba's health indices rank extraordinarily at a developed country level, considering that Cuba is a country of poor resources and economic underdevelopment. Cuba also boasts one of the highest physician-per-inhabitant ratios in the world, though massive deployment of doctors on foreign missions can leave gaps in the country's domestic primary healthcare programs. Medical tourism is also a thriving and growing industry today in Cuba. So far, it is widely believed that medical workers are Cuba's most important export commodity. Cuba also successfully exports many medical products, such as vaccines.

Full timeline

Year/period

Type of event

Event

Location

1881

Discovery

Cuban epidemiologist Carlos Finlay provides evidence that mosquito Aedes aegypti transmits disease to and from humans.

1898–1902

Achievement

Yellow fever is virtually eradicated due to the efforts of Clara Maass and surgeon Jesse William Lazear during this period of U.S. presence.

1950–1955

Report

Infant mortality rate levels at 80.69 deaths per 1,000 live births, a figure higher than those of Paraguay and Surinam.

1959

Political change

End of Cuban revolution and establishment of the socialist state and communist government. Fidel Castro takes office.

1960

Publication

Revolutionary and physician Ernesto "Che" Guevara writes crucial essay entitled On Revolutionary Medicine, outlining the future of Cuban healthcare.

1960

Policy

The Ministry of Public Health begins a program of nationalization and regionalization of medical services. First U.S. embargo against Cuba.

1961

Organization (campaign)

Cuba starts to deploy physicians to work in poor countries around the world, starting with medical brigades to assist during the Algerian War.

1962

Policy

"Vaccination days" are established with the goal of reaching the entire population. Proving later to be effective in eliminating polio, it is subsequently adopted in other countries as a primary strategy.

1963

Policy (Campaign)

The Cuban medical internationalism program is initiated.

1963

Foreign policy

U.S. embargo against Cuba prohibits trade in food, medicines, and medical supplies.

1963

Achievement

Cuba declares free of polio.

1965

Policy

Cuban government creates a system of community-based polyclinics, with aims at providing primary-care, specialty services, and laboratory and diagnostic testing to a catchment area of 25,000 to 30,000 people.

1969

Organization (research institute)

Cuban Neuroscience Center (CNEURO) founded.

Havana

1970

Development

First Kidney transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (Nephrology Institute)

1970

Policy

The Maternal–Child Programme (Programa Nacional de Atencion Materno-Infantil—PAMI) is launched with the purpose of assuring the health of women of child-bearing age and their children.

1972

Organization (alliance)

Cuba becomes a full member of the Soviet-based Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON).

1972

Achievement

Cuba declares free of neonatal tetanus.

1976

Policy

Fidel Castro elected president. Cuban constitution revision. Article 50:

1979

Achievement

Cuba declares free of diphteria.

1979

Organization (medical school)

University of Medical Sciences, Cienfuegos is founded.

Cienfuegos

1982

Organization (hospital)

Hermanos Ameijeiras Hospital (HDCQHA) is founded.

Havana

1984

Policy

A Family Doctor-and-Nurse Program is launched, by which neighborhood/home clinic model is adopted. The physician and the nurse must live in the neighborhood they're serving. They're also expected to conduct research and present their findings at congresses or in journals.

1985

Development

First heart transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (HDCQHA)

1985–1990

Report

Infant mortality rate levels at 13.01 deaths per 1,000 live births, the lowest in Latin America.

1986

Development

First heart-lung transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (HDCQHA)

1986

Development

First liver transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (HDCQHA)

1986

Development

First pancreas-kidney transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (Nephrology Institute)

1989

Development

First lung transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana

1990

Development

First heart-lung transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (HDCQHA)

1991

Crisis

Collapse of Soviet Union and beginning of the so-called Special Period. Soviet funding halts, depriving Cuba from almost all foreign commodities, including pharmaceuticals. An epidemic of optical and peripheral neuropathy, subsequently traced to a sharp decline in protein, vitamins, and some other micronutrients, afflicts at least 50 000 Cubans. Also a modest increase in mortality from infectious diseases, particularly tuberculosis, is observed.

1992

Foreign policy/crisis

U.S. “Torricelli Bill” tightens embargo against Cuba, thus deepening the severe material shortages and affecting medical care. The number of foreign-based subsidiaries of U.S. companies granted licenses to sell medicines to Cuba start to decline dramatically.

1993

Achievement

Cuba declares free of measles.

1994

Achievement

Cuba declares free of pertussis.

1994

Organization (medical school)

Facultad de Ciencias Medicas Sancti Spiritus is founded.

Sancti Spiritus

1994

Organization (Research institute)

Center of Molecular Immunology (Centro de Inmunología Molecular) or CIM is founded.

Havana

1995

Achievement

Cuba declares free of rubella and mumps.

1999

Organization (medical school)

ELAM (Latin American School of Medicine) is founded.

Havana

2000

Kofi Annan: "Cuba's achievements in social development are impressive given the size of its gross domestic product per capita. As the human development index of the United Nations makes clear year after year, Cuba should be the envy of many other nations, ostensibly far richer. Cuba demonstrates how much nations can do with the resources they have if they focus on the right priorities - health, education, and literacy."

2002

Report

Cuba attains the second lowest infant mortality in the Americas, 20% below the U.S. rate for all ethnic groups and also below the rate for white Americans.

2004

Organization (program launch)

Operation Miracle is initiated by Cuba jointly with Venezuela, in which medical workers from both countries would perform surgeries for cataracts, glaucoma, and other eye ailments, with the goal of reaching six million operations across the Americas by 2015.

2005

Development

First pediatric liver transplant is performed in Cuba.

Havana (HDCQHA)

2005

Organization (campaign)

Cuba offers to send 1500 medics to New Orleans in response to Hurricane Katrina. Such aid is rejected by the U.S. government.

2006

Policy

The Cuban government spends about $355 per capita on health, 7.1% of total Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

2011

Achievement

Cuba announces release of the world's first lung cancer vaccine.

2012

Development

First Latin American catheter ablation registry established.

2015

Achievement

Cuba becomes the first country to eradicate mother-to-child transmission of HIV and syphilis.

See also

  • Timeline of healthcare in India
  • Timeline of healthcare in China
  • Timeline of healthcare in Japan