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Cuba's Doctors Sell Rice Amid Healthcare Crisis
26 Mar
Summary
- Doctors supplement low salaries by selling food to afford basic necessities.
- Healthcare system faces severe shortages of medicine and supplies.
- U.S. sanctions exacerbate the existing economic crisis impacting care.

A Cuban doctor, earning about $16 per month, wakes early to sell rice and beans, a side hustle necessitated by soaring costs and regular power outages. This reflects the dire state of Cuba's healthcare system, weakened by economic hardship and U.S. sanctions. The situation has worsened significantly due to recent oil blockades, leading to critical shortages.
Currently, 96,000 individuals, including 11,000 children, are on surgical waiting lists, a figure projected to rise to 160,000 by year-end. Many pediatric surgeries are hampered by a lack of essential medicines and supplies. The energy crisis further disrupts healthcare, with power outages halting water pumps vital for clinic operations.
Despite official assurances, frontline medical professionals describe severe shortages of basic supplies, forcing them to reuse materials or improvise with bottles for medical needs. The vice minister for public health acknowledged a reduction in patient visits and supplies, noting that essential medications for cancer patients are unavailable, impacting survival rates.




