This essay questions the achievements and assessments of the Cuban health system. It argues that health policies in Cuba in the past half century have been implemented with limited concern for civil liberties and certain human rights that are considered a core component of a responsive, transparent, and accountable health system. Three cases are discussed in support of this assessment: (1) the persecution of Cuban analysts who questioned the official version of the socioeconomic situation of prerevolutionary Cuba, including the health state of affairs; (2) the harassment and segregation of gays and people living with HIV; and (3) the violation of labor rights of Cuban physicians working in international missions.
CITATION STYLE
Gomez-Dantes, O. (2018). The dark side of cuba’s health system: Free speech, rights of patients, and labor rights of physicians. Health Systems and Reform. Taylor and Francis Inc. https://doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2018.1446275
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.