some countries do it better than others
CULTIVATING EMPATHY
by
GARY OLSON
_________________________________________________________________
Gary
Olson
chairs the Political Science Department at Moravian College
in Bethlehem, PA.
In
1999, Cuba founded ELAM (the Latin America School of Medicine),
the world's largest medical school. It offers a free education
(including books and a living stipend) to students from poor
countries, and more than 10,000 students have graduated from
its highly respected six-year program.
Today's
pop quiz: Which of the following countries has the most medical
professionals working in the world's poorest countries; has
doctors who have performed three million free eye operations
in 33 countries; created the world's largest medical school
with 22,000 students; has a ratio of one physician for every
167 people (No. 1 in the world); has lower infant mortality
and higher life expectancy than the United States; and has free,
high quality, universal primary health care?
A.
Sweden
B. France
C. Canada
D. Norway
E. None of the above
The
correct answer is E. None of the above. Many Americans are surprised
to learn that the country described above is Cuba. For more
than five decades we've heard plenty about Cuba's shortcomings,
but virtually nothing about its stunning accomplishments.
For
many scholars, the Cuban health care system is the jewel in
the crown of Cuban achievements. Here I choose to focus on Cuba's
medical internationalism, a practice admired throughout the
world but virtually unknown to U.S. citizens.
After
the Cuban revolution of Jan. 1, 1959, which overthrew the brutal
Batista dictatorship, about half of Cuba's doctors fled the
island for more lucrative practices, most to Miami. Yet even
under these dire circumstances and the crushing U.S. embargo
that followed, Cuba began dispatching volunteer medical contingents
abroad.
Many
people are surprised to learn that Cuban medical professionals
have saved more lives in the Third World than all the wealthy
G-8 nations combined, plus the World Health Organization and
the Nobel Peace Prize recipient Doctors Without Borders.
As
noted by Cuba expert John Lee Anderson, "At any given time,
there are an estimated 50,000 Cuban doctors working in slums
and rural areas in as many as 30 other developing nations around
the world."
And
because Cuba believes health care is a fundamental human right,
these totally volunteer services are provided to recipients
gratis. One remarkable example among many follows from Cuba's
world class specialization in ophthalmology. Under Operacion
Milagro (Operation Miracle), Cuban specialists have performed
vision-restoring surgery to two million people in 34 countries,
again at no cost.
In
sentiments shared by people from Asia and Africa to Latin American
and the Caribbean, Bolivian President Evo Morales expressed
his gratitude for Cuba's crucial medical assistance to his country
by saying, "Cuba has shown its solidarity to us by sending
troops who save lives -- not like other countries which send
troops to end lives."
In
1999, Cuba founded ELAM (the Latin America School of Medicine),
the world's largest medical school. It offers a free education
(including books and a living stipend) to students from poor
countries, and more than 10,000 students have graduated from
its highly respected six-year program. The only requirement
is that students make a moral commitment to return home and
serve marginalized populations. Note: Since 2007, more than
100 young people from the U.S. have graduated from ELAM and
returned to work in underserved areas of the United States.
At
this point, I can readily appreciate why some readers might
react with cynicism. Canadian professor John Kirk, who conducted
120 in-depth interviews with Cuban medical volunteers, acknowledges
a myriad of motives. However, he emphasizes that "a key
element that needs to be understood is the form of socialization
that Cubans are reared in, and develop throughout their formative
years."
Professor
Kirk notes that beginning in day care, Cuban children are socialized
to watch out for the weakest, to empathize with others who are
less fortunate. A volunteer physician in Venezuela added, "We
Cuban doctors devote everything to love and solidarity because
that's what we've been taught since we were little, in school."
This was a founding principle of the Cuban revolution.
Cuba's
robust medical internationalism contradicts the common-sense,
bleak view of human nature, the dominant narrative of hyper
individualism and the profit motive. I suggest that we remain
open to the possibility that some cultures are compatible with
the lived expression of empathy while other cultures suppress
it.
Cuba's
practice of moral medicine is the world's most compelling example
of empathetic solidarity. Despite overwhelming odds, this small
country of 11 million people has taken empathy from the abstract
realm and brought it down to earth. We court both personal and
national peril by not learning more about it.
Also
by Gary Olson:
On
the Birth of ISIS
Can
Capitalism Save Itself
Manufacturing
Memory
Unmaking
War, Remaking Man
Rifkin
and Singer