Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Cuba reports more cholera among foreign visitors

Posted on Monday, 08.26.13

Cuba reports more cholera among foreign visitors
BY JUAN O. TAMAYO
JTAMAYO@ELNUEVOHERALD.COM

Cuba-born New York high school teacher Alfredo Gómez says it was bad
enough that he contracted cholera during a family visit to Havana this
summer. Then he got a bill from the government hospital -- $4,700.

Gómez' complaint came as Havana reported that a total of 12 foreign
tourists and 151 Cubans have come down with cholera in recent months –
though Gómez says his hospital ward alone had six to 15 foreigners on
every one of the six days that he spent there.

The Havana report on cholera, the second in August alone, seemed to hint
at a growing transparency by Cuban officials who previously kept quiet
about the disease in a bid to avoid damaging the island's $2.5
billion-a-year tourism industry, experts said.

A bulletin Friday by the Pan American Health Organization said Cuba that
same day had reported 163 cases in the provinces of Havana, Santiago de
Cuba and Camagüey. PAHO, the hemispheric branch of the World Health
Organization, indicated that those cases took place this year but gave
no specific time frame.

Among those cases were 12 persons who had travelled to Cuba from other
countries – three from Italy, two each from Germany, Spain, Chile and
Venezuela and one from the Netherlands, PAHO noted. Cuba had reported
six of those cases to PAHO earlier this month.

Independent journalists and visitors like Gómez have been reporting
hundreds more cases never confirmed by Cuba, where the state-run news
media virtually never uses the word "cholera" and instead refers to
cases of "acute diarrheic diseases."

Gómez, 49, who left Cuba in 1997 and now teaches math at the William
Nottingham High School in Syracuse, N.Y., said he and two relatives were
hit by intense diarrheas two days after they ate together at a state-run
restaurant in Havana in late July.

Doctors at the Manuel Fajardo Hospital told them they had cholera, Gómez
said, and transferred him to the Pedro Kouri Institute of Tropical
Medicine, where the fourth floor of the hospital is reserved for
foreigners who contract the disease.

Gómez said at least six and up to 15 foreigners were on the floor each
of the six days he spent there, Aug. 4-10, receiving antibiotics and
intravenous fluids for the disease, which is easily transmitted through
water and can kill through dehydration.

That same week more than 60 Cubans were being treated in Kouri hospital
wards reserved for island residents with cholera, he said, and a nephew
told him that a large number of people had been struck by the disease in
the Havana suburb of Mantilla.

The treatment fore foreigners at the hospital was very good and much
better than the treatment for island residents, he added, but problems
started when the foreign patients received huge bills as they were about
the leave the hospital.

He heard two Spaniards on the phone with their insurance companies in
Madrid trying to figure out how and what to pay, Gómez said. And he was
pressured strongly to pay his own bill with his credit cards or through
his U.S. health insurance policy.

"They really want to charge me, and they tried by all means that I
should pay," he said in a phone interview from Syracuse. "It was a rude,
abusive attitude. They would not let met leave without paying."

The bill he was shown was for $4,700 but he left without paying, he
added, arguing that the U.S. embargo banned him from paying and that in
any case his bill should be paid by the government-run restaurant where
he contracted cholera.

Cuba technically requires all visitors from abroad to obtain separate
Cuban health insurance policies, which usually are purchased on arrival
at an airport. It is not clear why those policies would not have paid
for the foreigners' stays at the Kouri hospital.

Cholera reappeared in Cuba last summer, after a 100-year absence, with
the return of Cuban medical personnel who had worked in Haiti, where an
epidemic has killed more than 8,200 people since 2010. Havana has
confirmed only three deaths on the island, although independent
journalists have reported dozens more.

PAHO's statement Friday meanwhile said Havana had reported 47 cholera
cases after Hurricane Sandy swept over the eastern part of the island in
October, and another 51 cases in the province of Havana at the beginning
of this year.

Havana's report lacked details "but they seem to be trying to be more
public," said Sherri Porcelain, a University of Miami lecturer in global
public health and senior research associate at the Institute for Cuban
and Cuban-American Studies.

Cuba "reported that prompt and appropriate control actions were
implemented in response to these outbreaks," PAHO added, without
mentioning the state-run news media's refusal in most cases to use the
word "cholera."

"Per the information received, Cuba continues to develop and implement
cholera prevention and control plans, to strengthen awareness of
preventive measures by the public, to control food preparations sites,
and carry out epidemiological surveillance of acute diarrheal diseases,"
PAHO said.

"Public health awareness campaigns were intensified during the summer
season; particularly those related to hand washing, chlorinated water
intake, safe food preparation (and) washing of fruits and vegetables.

Source: "Cuba reports more cholera among foreign visitors - Cuba -
MiamiHerald.com" -
http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/08/26/v-fullstory/3587434/cuba-reports-more-cholera-among.html

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