Sunday, April 19, 2026

Does Cuba have universal healthcare?

 

Yes,  Cuba   has a universal healthcare system that is state-run and theoretically provides medical services to all citizens free of charge. Established after the 1959 Revolution, the right to health is enshrined in the Cuban Constitution, which mandates that the state provide free medical, dental, and hospital care.

Key Features of the System
  • Government-Run: All healthcare facilities are owned and operated by the government; private hospitals and clinics are illegal.
  • Focus on Prevention: The system emphasizes primary care and community-based health. Family doctors and nurses often live in the same neighborhoods they serve.
  • National Priority: Cuba typically spends a high percentage of its GDP on healthcare (around 11.4% as of 2024), resulting in health indicators like infant mortality rates that are comparable to those in many high-income countries.
  • Medical Exports: Cuba is famous for its "medical internationalism," sending thousands of doctors abroad on humanitarian missions, which also serves as a major source of revenue for the government.

Current Challenges and Realities
While the system is universal in design, it has faced severe strain in recent years due to economic crises, energy shortages, and the long-standing U.S. embargo.
  • Supply Shortages: Many hospitals suffer from a lack of basic supplies, including bandages, surgical equipment, and essential medicines like antibiotics and insulin.
  • Facility Deterioration: Reports indicate crumbling infrastructure in some local hospitals, with issues like broken elevators and lack of running water or electricity.
  • Medical Professional Salaries: Healthcare workers receive very low state wages (often between $15 and $70 USD per month), leading many to leave the profession for the tourism sector or emigrate entirely.
  • Dual System: A notable disparity exists between the high-quality care provided to paying "health tourists" or high-ranking officials and the more basic, resource-depleted care available to the average Cuban.
📍 Note: In practice, patients or their families are often expected to provide their own basic items, such as bedsheets, lightbulbs, or food, when admitted to a hospital.
Cuba's program of furnishing healthcare professionals to other countries, known as medical internationalism, is a cornerstone of its foreign policy and a major economic engine. Since the 1960s, Cuba has dispatched hundreds of thousands of medical workers to over 164 countries to provide aid during natural disasters, pandemics, and long-term development projects.
Structure of the Program
Cuba currently maintains around 24,000 healthcare professionals in approximately 56 countries. The arrangements generally follow three models:
  • Solidarity Missions: Services are provided for free to lower-income countries, with Cuba often covering most of the costs.
  • Barter Agreements: Most famously with , where Cuba sends doctors in exchange for subsidized oil (historically around 50,000–100,000 barrels per day).
  • Commercial Contracts: Countries like , and  pay the Cuban government directly for medical services.
Economic Impact
Medical missions have become Cuba’s largest source of foreign currency, surpassing tourism and nickel exports.
  • Revenue: The program generates billions annually, with reports estimating between $4.9 billion and $8 billion in recent years.
  • Salary Distribution: The Cuban government typically retains between 75% and 95% of the wages paid by host countries, using these funds to support its domestic economy and health system.

Major Controversies
While praised for humanitarian work in places like  and West Africa (during the Ebola crisis), the program faces severe international criticism.
IssueDescription
Forced Labor AllegationsOrganizations like the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and the U.S. State Department classify some practices as human trafficking or "forced labor".
Coercion & ControlDoctors have reported that the government confiscates their passports, restricts their movement, and threatens them with up to eight years in prison if they defect.
U.S. PressureThe U.S. has actively pressured countries like , and  to end their agreements with Cuba, leading several to terminate or review their partnerships as of 2026.
Domestic ImpactCritics argue that exporting so many doctors has left Cuban hospitals severely understaffed, contributing to the decline of care for its own citizens.
📍 Note: In 2023, the U.S. State Department warned host governments that participating in these missions may facilitate labor exploitation and urged them to ensure direct payment to the doctors.