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Subject: Cuban connection helps healthcare woes
TIMOR-LESTE: Cuban connection helps healthcare woes
29 Mar 2010 13:41:50 GMT
Source: IRIN
DILI, 29 March 2010 (<http://www.IRINnews.org>IRIN) - Well before
8am, the reception at Bairo Formosa health centre in Dili, the capital of
Timor-Leste, is bursting with people. The medical staff - a Timorese
dental specialist, public doctor and six Cuban medics - see up to 600
patients a day.
Since independence in 2002, one of the biggest challenges facing Asia's
newest nation has been how to rebuild the health sector to meet the needs
of one of the fastest-growing populations in the world, with women having,
on average, six or seven children each.
Jaime dos Reis, chief of the health centre at Bairo Formosa, told IRIN:
"In Dili, especially at this clinic, there aren't enough Timorese
doctors. The doctors cannot handle 600 patients. They just can't."
That is where Cuba, which prides itself on having a strong healthcare
system, comes in.
As part of an agreement signed in 2003, Cuba agreed to take on hundreds
of Timorese medical students whose return to Timor-Leste is hoped will
relieve the strain on healthcare facilities in the fledgling nation.
The plan is to have one Timorese doctor per 1,000 of the 1.1 million
population, said Diamantino de Jesus, the Ministry of Health's national
director for human resources.
"At that time we had many problems in the health sector. That is
why Fidel Castro asked how Cuba can help develop the country. The
president of Cuba then offered the scholarships," he said.
Rural restrictions
In Timor Leste, about three-quarters of the population live in rural
areas, where access to healthcare is often limited.
About 40 percent of people live below the poverty line and diseases
such as leprosy remain endemic, the UN reports.
Illiteracy and poor sanitation are widespread, while almost half of all
children under five are chronically malnourished, according to the UN
Children's Fund (UNICEF).
Rui de Araujo, senior management adviser with the Ministry of Finance,
says up to 75 percent of all health problems in the country - contagious
diseases and illnesses related to hygiene, nutrition, access to clean
water, vaccinations - could be prevented.
"That was the basic rationale of why we started to bring in many
Timorese young people to be trained in the general practice, basic
medicine, to focus on community health, public health and health promotion
so the country can tackle these problems," he said.
During Indonesia's 24-year occupation of Timor-Leste, people became
accustomed to obtaining primary healthcare from doctors. When the
Indonesians left in 1999, so did many health professionals.
The shortage of doctors means many people often go to hospital for
basic healthcare.
"The primary healthcare facilities are not providing all the
answers to the community and they will take themselves into hospitals and
secondary healthcare settings to solve what is supposed to be solved at
the primary healthcare centres," De Araujo said.
Skill sharing
At the moment there are 845 Timorese medical students, of whom 658 are
in Cuba. They will finish their studies with internships back in
Timor-Leste.
Eighteen students are already nearing the end of their studies and
working in community health centres in the vicinity of one of the
country's six hospitals.
At the same time, another 250 students are studying in Timor-Leste,
working under the supervision of the more than 200 Cuban health
professionals in the nation. They will also study in Cuba for a year.
Within a few years, it is expected that there will be all Timorese
medical teams staffing the nation's 187 health posts, 65 community health
centres and six hospitals.
Students were selected from each of the country's sub-districts, so it
is hoped they will be loyal enough to their roots to pass over the
temptation of taking their newfound skills elsewhere to better-paid work.
mc/ds/mw
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