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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
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- From: ww%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (Workers World Service)
- Subject: Cuba's Evolving AIDS Policy
- Message-ID: <1993Jan10.213712.2480@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: NY Transfer News Collective
- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1993 21:37:12 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 139
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- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- CUBA'S EVOLVING AIDS POLICY
-
- By Brenda Sandburg
- San Francisco
-
- Two HIV-positive gay men from Cuba are on an historic two-month
- U.S. tour talking about Cuba's AIDS policy. The trip by Dr. Juan
- Carlos de la Concepcion and Raul Llanos is unprecedented. Cuba
- has long been vilified for its public health policy around AIDS;
- this is the first time any HIV-positive person from Cuba has been
- able to speak in the U.S. The reason for this is the criminal
- U.S. blockade of Cuba, which has made it difficult for Cubans to
- come to this country to talk about their revolution and its
- gains.
-
- Concepcion and Llanos tell of how Cuba's AIDS policy has evolved,
- and how despite the U.S. blockade Cuba has made great strides.
- They spoke to 55 people at a San Francisco Workers World forum
- Jan. 3.
-
- Concepcion and Llanos will also be speaking in Los Angeles, San
- Jose and Santa Cruz, Calif., New York, Washington and
- Philadelphia.
-
- Karen Wald, a North American journalist who has lived in Cuba for
- the last 11 years, and her daughter Sierra Thai-Binh helped
- translate the Jan. 3 meeting. Wald, a producer of the documentary
- "Living with AIDS in Cuba," is one of the main organizers
- facilitating the U.S. tour.
-
- THE SANATORIUM ISSUE
-
- Concepcion and Llanos entered Cuba's first AIDS sanatorium in
- 1986. Concepcion is a doctor and Llanos is an accountant and
- computer expert who computerized Cuba's sanatorium system. They
- told the San Francisco meeting that "to understand the reality of
- the sanatoriums, you have to understand the reality of Cuba."
-
- Concepcion explained that health care is a constitutional right
- in Cuba, free for every citizen. AIDS is not considered a
- political problem in Cuba, but a medical problem. The sanatorium
- system was created to limit the spread of AIDS.
-
- Cuba's national program to combat AIDS also includes testing
- large sectors of the population, testing all blood donations, and
- epidemiological surveys of all those who test positive. This
- program "has allowed Cuba to almost completely eliminate
- pediatric AIDS," said Concepcion. "It has allowed Cuba to contain
- the spread of AIDS and to provide thorough and comprehensive
- medical treatment."
-
- Llanos noted that as of Dec. 7, a total of 863 people had tested
- positive for the HIV virus--a relatively small increase each year
- since 1986 when 99 people tested positive. Of these people, 249,
- or 28.9 percent, were women; 614--71.1 percent--were men. Of the
- men, 363 were homosexual or bisexual. Thus, gay men make up a
- minority of people with AIDS in Cuba, so the social context for
- public health policy is different from that in the U.S.
-
- To date, 84 people have died, 159 are classified as having AIDS
- and 620 are HIV positive.
-
- Llanos also noted that only nine people contracted HIV through
- blood transfusions--seven prior to 1986. At that time, Cuba
- stopped all importation of blood and blood derivatives from
- countries that had an incidence of AIDS. Cuba developed its own
- AIDS antibody diagnostic test kit in 1985.
-
- Concepcion acknowledged that he was not happy about having to go
- to the sanatorium. But he said the sanatorium of 1986 was very
- different from the current system that now includes 11
- sanatoriums.
-
- "The year I went into the sanatorium we had little hope of being
- back on the street. Now everyone goes in and out," he said.
- Fifteen days after he went in, a pass system was created, which
- allowed people to go out with a chaperone about once a month.
- Shortly thereafter, this was expanded to every weekend.
-
- In 1989, the sanatorium policy underwent "a complete revolution,"
- Concepcion said. Many people in the sanatorium began to work, and
- a system of "garante" (acting responsibly) was launched.
-
- Under the garante system, a multidisciplinary panel of doctors,
- psychologists, sociologists and nurses meet with patients on an
- individual basis six months after they have entered the
- sanatorium and received AIDS education. They determine if an
- individual is "garante"--responsible to be out of the sanatorium
- without a chaperone. People who are non-garante are chaperoned.
-
- The sanatorium system "has one thing against it, which is it
- limits the free movement of people," Concepcion asserted. He said
- this too will change, for in the coming months Cuba will give
- those in the sanatorium the option of going home.
-
- "The sanatorium will become what we have always dreamed it would
- be--a specialized center where someone with HIV can get
- specialized medical attention and learn how to live with AIDS,
- and have the option of living in the sanatorium or not."
-
- Despite its limitations, the speakers said the sanatorium takes
- care of all their medical needs. People with HIV also receive the
- same salaries they had before they went into the sanatorium
- whether they work or not.
-
- Llanos was asked whether the U.S. government's blockade of Cuba
- has affected the sanatoriums. He said that while the rest of the
- country suffers from a scarcity of electricity, fuel,
- transportation and food, the sanatoriums do not lack these
- things.
-
- However, the sanatoriums are beginning to have problems obtaining
- some medicines. He also noted that Cuba has to pay three times
- the price for AZT it should pay.
-
- Concepcion said Cuba has not been able to obtain ddI or ddC, the
- two other drugs that have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
- Administration for the treatment of AIDS. ddI is manufactured by
- Bristol-Myers Squibb. ddC is manufactured by Hoffmann-La Roche.
- Cuba is trying to develop its own medicines, primarily
- interferons that can interfere with HIV reproduction.
-
- -30-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; via e-mail: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org or
- workers@igc.apc.org or workers@mcimail.com.)
-
-
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