sábado, 22 de marzo de 2014

Cuba hikes pay for doctors at home and abroad

Posted on Friday, 03.21.14



Cuba hikes pay for doctors at home and abroad

BY JUAN O. TAMAYO

JTAMAYO@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM



Cuba has announced steep salary increases for its 440,000 medical

personnel, and reported that the more than 50,000 doctors, dentists and

technicians working abroad are expected to bring $8.2 billion into

government coffers this year.



The pay hikes come amid complaints that Cuba's public health system,

once the pride of the communist government, is suffering from low

salaries and shortages of personnel, equipment and medicines.



A salary scale published in the official newspaper Granma on Friday

showed the monthly pay for top-ranked physicians will spike from 627

pesos to 1,600 — about twice the average monthly salary for doctors but

still only $61 per month.



At the bottom of the scale, basic nurses will be raised from 320 to 595

pesos, or $22 per month, and basic doctors and dentists will go from 425

and 468, respectively, to 1,100 pesos. Pay for night shifts, now the

same as day shifts, will double, Granma reported.



Pay hikes also will go to many of the health personnel who work abroad

under contract, Granma said, adding that the government plans to earn

$8.2 billion from their work in 2014. The export of labor, mostly

medical personnel, is Cuba's top hard currency earner.



The Cuban government keeps the lion's share of the money paid by the

foreign countries. The medical personnel are paid far more than their

brethren back on the island, but usually much less than native doctors

in the countries where they work.



More than 25,000 Cuban medical personnel are currently working in

Venezuela — leftist President Nicolás Maduro in exchange sends 115,000

barrels of oil a day and other payments to Cuba — and 11,400 have been

contracted by Brazil. Most work in the public health systems in poor and

remote areas of the two countries.



Granma reported that healthcare workers in Venezuela and in eye-surgery

programs around the Caribbean will see their salaries doubled, which

would bring them close to the levels of the Cubans in Brazil.



Public protests in recent weeks forced the Brazilian government to

increase the payments to the Cuban medical personnel in that country to

$1,245 per month. Brazil pays another $2,800 or so directly to the Cuban

government.



Granma said the pay hikes, which will take effect June 1, "will

contribute to the stability and quality of the medical services to the

people (in Cuba), as well as to meeting international commitments."



Vice President Marino Murillo was quoted as saying in the report that

the new pay scale also would end some special payments, but did not

detail them. The only special payments kept will be for teaching,

special conditions and years of work, he added.



Murillo also reportedly said that the pay hikes are part of a government

campaign to raise overall salaries — the average monthly salary

officially stands at $20 — starting with "the more efficient activities

and labor of those workers that contribute benefits."



The island of 11 million people has more than 440,000 medical personnel,

giving it the best per-capita rate in the world. About 50,000 of them

are working abroad in 66 countries under government-to-government

contracts, according to official figures.



Granma reported that the government's Council of Ministers approved the

pay hikes Wednesday. Ruler Raúl Castro announced in February that the

salaries for medical professionals would be raised, but gave no figures.



Castro has been cutting back government spending and allowing more

small-scale private enterprise in an effort to decentralize the island's

Soviet-style economy and make it more efficient and productive.



Murillo reported that 109,000 public health workers were laid off

between 2010 and 2013, saving the government 2 billion pesos (about $80

million) "without affecting the quality of the services," Granma reported.



The private practice of medicine in Cuba has been illegal since the

early 1960s, although in recent years doctors, nurses and dentists have

been charging fees for off-the-books procedures or accepting "gifts" to

expedite some services.



Source: Cuba hikes pay for doctors at home and abroad - Cuba -

MiamiHerald.com -

http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/03/21/4009890/cuba-hikes-pay-for-doctors-at.html

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