Despite U.S. blockade, Cuban pharma industry producing needed COVID-19 medicines

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Cuba Is The Home Of Medical Cures

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Students, some wearing protective masks as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus, sing the national anthem, in Havana, Cuba, Friday, March 13, 2020. Cuba's publicly-owned pharmaceutical industry is prioritizing production of coronavirus treatments and therapies. | Ramon Espinosa / AP




HAVANA—(Granma) Although there is no preventive vaccine or specific treatment at this time for the new coronavirus SARS COV-2, which causes COVID-19, the Cuban pharmaceutical industry is guaranteeing production of proven, high efficacy treatment medications, including recombinant human interferon alpha 2b, in addition to another group of drugs that are included in protocols for treating patients with this disease and the complications that may arise.


According to the president of BioCubaFarma, Dr. Eduardo Martínez Díaz, in this effort the company has taken into account the experience of China, via a guide published by that country’s pharmaceutical association for the detection and treatment of the virus.


This guide, he noted, recommends interferon as the first choice medication, which Cuba has the ability to supply to its public health system and internationally.


Cuba has been supplying interferon as a preventive measure as well as for confirmed COVID-19 patients, via nebulization, the most rapid way to reach the lungs and have an impact in the early stages of infection, explained Marta Ayala Ávila, deputy director of the Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB). Interferon is being produced with Cuban technology in Jilin, China, at the joint venture Changchun Heber Biological Technology facility.


At the same time, she said, Cuba been preparing for the use of interferon at home, as the country has capacity not only at the Chinese joint venture facility, but also within the country.


For his part, CIGB general director Eulogio Pimentel Vázquez reported that a supply of interferon is available to treat the estimated number of cases that could appear in Cuba over a period of three to six months. In addition, he said, “We have a total supply of the product in process that is practically equivalent to the amount needed to treat all those who were infected in China.”


Currently, this drug is included in protocols established by the Ministry of Public Health for the care of patients with the new coronavirus, and requests have been received from the health ministries of several countries. Pimentel said the center has the capacity to respond not only to a possible increase in Cuba’s own demand, but also to meet the 15 requests that have been received thus far from other nations, both for information and acquisition of the product.


Although recombinant human interferon alpha 2b has made headlines in the last few days in various international media given its efficacy in the treatment of patients infected with the new coronavirus, this is not the only medicine that Cuba has on hand to confront the global pandemic.


There are 21 other products included in Cuba’s protocol for treatment, among these are antivirals, antiarrhythmics, and antibiotics, for the treatment of complications that may arise in patients with COVID-19, and the industry can guarantee their production, Martínez emphasized.


For example, AICA Laboratories manufactures 170 injectable medicines and sterile eye drops, and five of these are included in the basic protocol for patient care, stated the company’s general director, Antonio Vallín.


National availability has also been reviewed of intermediate materials and finished products, as well as the capacity to maintain production, while work continues on natural products to support the immune system and increase its response to any virus, he added.


Rita Maria García, BioCubaFarma’s director of Operations and Technology, reported that preparations for the current situation were begun well in advance and that the country’s health institutions have a stable supply of needed medications, although strategies to increase coverage are being implemented.


Drugs available include, for example, azithromycin in tablet and suspension form, injectable vancomycin, atenolol, methylprednisolone, diazepam, midazolam, paracetamol, ibuprofen, dipyrone, general anesthetics, as well as parenteral solutions needed for intensive care, such as dextrose, ringer, and albumin, among others.


Regarding dipyrone, the BioCubaFarma president reported that 600 million tablets are required annually in the country and, although production capacity to ensure this amount does not exist today, coverage for hospital use is guaranteed.


“We hope that the containment and epidemiological surveillance measures adopted by the Ministry of Public Health can have an impact limiting further infections in the country,” he said, “but BioCubaFarma is prepared to provide these 22 drugs for the treatment of thousands of potential patients.”


Martínez Díaz acknowledged that 15% of medicines supplied by the industry are currently missing from pharmacies and that distribution cycles have been extended, as a result of difficulties in acquiring raw materials and the lack of spare parts for equipment used in the manufacturing process.


He noted that the U.S. blockade has a significant impact, as suppliers in that country have refused to sell Cuba equipment and supplies, citing the government’s financial persecution. Others do not want to sign new contracts, and those who have maintained commercial relations must face a number of obstacles.


In fact, we have significant financial resources that we are not able to deposit in the country because of the blockade’s restrictions on banks, he noted.


On the other hand, Biomodulin T is a drug also considered an option to treat the new coronavirus. According to Mary Carmen Reyes, a specialist in immunology and head of clinical trials at the National Center for Biopreparations (BioCen), it is a modulator, included in Cuba’s basic inventory of medicines, used for recurring respiratory infections in older adults, to increase the patient’s defenses.


In the case of COVID-19, she said, data published in scientific journals points to how the virus affects infected patients’ immune response and decreases T-cells. This drug has the capacity to stimulate the production of such cells, she explained.

Ariel Cecilio Lemus Alvarez | Granma
Given that elderly patients with weaker immune systems are prone to developing complications, the use of this drug is appropriate for both infected patients and those at risk, as well as health personnel.


The Cuban pharmaceutical industry is also emphasizing research and development as a strategy to confront the pandemic, seeking new products that have the ability to inhibit reproduction of the virus.


According to Gerardo Enrique Guillén Nieto, director of Biomedical Research at the CIGB, two inhibitory peptides are currently being studied. One of these is CIGB 210, part of a project that has been under development for years as an antiviral to treat AIDS patients.


“Based on the evidence that exists in the literature, we are now experimenting with the effect of this peptide on a coronavirus of bovine origin to evaluate its inhibition capacity. If it works, in collaboration with laboratories in China, we would analyze its effect against the new coronavirus.”


Another drug under consideration, coded as CIGB 300, is used to treat different types of cancer, including cervical and lung, and its antiviral capacity has been studied in patients with AIDS, Hepatitis C, and other viruses.


At the same time, a vaccine project is being designed, based on a platform of virus-like particles, with nasal immunization as a means of administration, a method used for the therapeutic vaccine against chronic Hepatitis B, developed at the CIGB. Data from this project has been made available to Chinese health authorities, to collaborate in its development, he concluded.
 
Cuba and coronavirus: how Cuban biotech came to combat COVID-19
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Cuba’s early entry into the biotech industry allowed it to harness international expertise and develop medicines to fight dengue fever and meningitis. One of these, Interferon Alfa-2B, is now being used to combat the effects of COVID-19, writes Helen Yaffe (University of Glasgow).
• Disponible también en español
COVID-19 emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late December 2019, and by January 2020 it had hit Hubei province like a tidal wave, swirling over China and rippling out overseas.
The Chinese state rolled into action to combat its spread and care for those infected. Amongst the 30 medicines chosen by the Chinese National Health Commission to fight the virus was a Cuban anti-viral drug called Interferon Alfa-2B, which has been produced in China by the Cuban-Chinese joint venture ChangHeber since 2003.
Graduates from Cuba’s University of Medical Sciences line up in Santa Clara’s Plaza de la Revolución (UCMVC, CC BY-NC 2.0)Interferon Alfa-2B and Cuban biotechnology
Cuban Interferon Alfa-2B has proven effective for viruses with characteristics similar to those of COVID-19. Cuban biotech specialist Dr Luis Herrera Martínez explains that “its use prevents aggravation and complications in patients, reaching that stage that can ultimately result in death.”
Cuba first developed and used interferons to arrest a deadly outbreak of the dengue virus in 1981, and that experience catalysed the development of the island’s now world-leading biotech industry.
The world’s first biotechnology enterprise, Genetech, was founded in San Francisco in 1976, followed by AMGen in Los Angeles in 1980. One year later, the Biological Front, a professional interdisciplinary forum, was set up to develop the industry in Cuba.
While most developing countries had little access to new technologies (recombinant DNA, human gene therapy, biosafety), Cuban biotechnology expanded and took on an increasingly strategic role in both the public-health sector and the national economic development plan. And this despite the US blockade, which obstructed access to technologies, equipment, materials, finance, and even knowledge exchange. Driven by public-health demand, it has been characterised by its fast track from research and innovation to trials and application, as the story of Cuban interferon shows.
The international history of Cuban interferons
Interferons are “signalling” proteins produced and released by cells in response to infections in order to prompt nearby cells to heighten their anti-viral defences. They were first identified in 1957 by Jean Lindenmann and Aleck Isaacs in London. In the 1960s, Ion Gresser, a US researcher in Paris, showed that interferons stimulate lymphocytes that attack tumours in mice. In the 1970s, US oncologist Randolph Clark Lee took up this research.
Interferons released by a cell infected with a virus prompt neighbouring cells to help stem the infection (CNX OpenStax, CC BY 4.0)
Catching the tail end of US President Carter’s improved relations with Cuba, Dr Clark Lee visited Cuba, met with Fidel Castro, and convinced him that interferons could become the wonder drug. Shortly afterwards, a Cuban doctor and a haematologist spent time in Dr Clark Lee’s laboratory, returning with the latest research about interferon and more contacts.
In March 1981, six Cubans spent 12 days in Finland with the Finnish doctor Kari Cantell, who in the 1970s had isolated interferon from human cells, and had shared the breakthrough by declining to patent the procedure. The Cubans learned to produce large quantities of interferons.
Within 45 days of returning to the island, they had produced the first Cuban batch of interferon, the quality of which was confirmed by Cantell’s laboratory in Finland. Just in time, it turned out.
Cuba’s 1981 dengue epidemic
Weeks later Cuba was struck by an epidemic of dengue, a disease transmitted by mosquitos. It was the first time this particularly virulent strand, which can trigger life-threatening dengue haemorrhagic fever, had appeared in the Americas.
The epidemic affected 340,000 Cubans, with 11,000 new cases diagnosed every day at its peak. 180 people died, including 101 children. The Cubans suspected the CIA of releasing the virus. The US State Department denied it, but a recent Cuban investigation claims to provide evidence that the epidemic was introduced from the US.
Cuba’s Ministry of Public Health authorised the use of Cuban interferon to halt the dengue outbreak. It was done at great speed, and mortality declined.
In their historical account, Cuban medical scientists Caballero Torres and López Matilla wrote:
It was the most extensive prevention and therapy event with interferon carried out in the world. Cuba began to hold regular symposia, which quickly drew international attention.
The first international event in 1983 was prestigious; Cantell gave the keynote speech and Clark attended with Albert Bruce Sabin, the Polish American scientist who developed the oral polio vaccine.
Convinced about the contribution and strategic importance of innovative medical science, the Cuban government set up the Biological Front in 1981 to develop the sector. Cuban scientists went abroad to study, many in western countries. Their research took on more innovative paths, as they experimented with cloning interferon.
By the time Cantell returned to Cuba in 1986, the Cubans had developed the recombinant human Interferon Alfa 2B, which has benefited thousands of Cubans since then. With significant state investment, Cuba also opened its showpiece Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB) in 1986. But by then Cuba was submerged in another health crisis, a serious outbreak of meningitis B, though this too served to stimulate Cuba’s biotechnology sector.
Cuba’s meningitis miracle
In 1976, Cuba was struck by outbreaks of meningitis types B and C. Prior to that, only a few isolated cases had been seen on the island. Internationally, vaccines existed for meningitis types A and C, but not for type B.
Cuban health authorities secured a vaccine from a French pharmaceutical company to immunise the population against type C meningitis. However, in the following years, cases of type B began to rise. A team of specialists from different medical science centres was established, led by a woman biochemist, Concepción Campa, to work intensively on finding a vaccine.
By 1984, meningitis B had become the most serious health problem in Cuba. After six years of intense work, Campa’s team produced the world’s first successful meningitis B vaccine in 1988. A member of Campa’s team, Dr Gustavo Sierra recalled their joy:
This was the moment when we could say it works, and it works in the worst conditions, under the pressure of an epidemic and amongst people of the most vulnerable age.
Between 1989 and 1990, the three million Cubans most at risk were vaccinated. Subsequently, 250,000 young people were vaccinated with the VA-MENGOC-BC vaccine, a combined vaccine for meningitis types B and C. The vaccine recorded a 95 per cent efficacy rate overall, with 97 per cent in the high-risk age group of three months to six years. Cuba’s meningitis B vaccine was awarded a UN Gold Medal for global innovation. This was Cuba’s meningitis miracle.
Recalling a chart of the rise and sudden fall of meningitis B cases in Cuba, the Director of the Centre for Molecular Immunology (CIM) Agustín Lage told me, “one can work 30 years, 14 hours a day, just to enjoy that graph for 10 minutes … Biotechnology started for this. But then the possibilities of developing an export industry opened up, and today Cuban biotechnology exports go to 50 countries.”
Since its first application to combat dengue fever, Cuba’s interferon has shown its efficacy and safety in the therapy of viral diseases including hepatitis types B and C, shingles, HIV-AIDS, and dengue. Because it interferes with viral multiplication within cells, it has also been used in the treatment of different types of carcinomas. Only time will tell if Interferon Alfa 2B proves to be the wonder drug in tackling COVID-19.


 
Coronavirus-infected cruise ship stranded at sea for weeks to dock in Cuba
The Braemar Cruise Ship has dozens on board not tested for COVID-19.
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Kirit Radia
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Christina Carrega
March 17, 2020, 12:38 PM
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Coronavirus-infected cruise ship to dock in CubaThe Braemar has been turned away from other ports in recent weeks.
Weeks after a cruise ship was blocked from disembarking at several ports in the Caribbean, due to fears of passengers with possible COVID-19 symptoms, Cuban officials are welcoming the vessel to dock and get their guests home.

When the Braemar cruise ship was first turned away by the Romana cruise port in the Dominican Republic on Feb. 27, the cruise line said in a press release that their decision was an "overreaction" due to a "very small" number of people with symptoms on board that they insisted were not consistent with COVID-19.

At the time, the ship was carrying 1,128 passengers mostly from the United Kingdom and 384 crew members, officials said.



The Fred Olson Cruise Liner Braemar is docked at the port in Havana, Cuba, April 14, 2008. On Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020 the Dominican Republic turned back the Braemar... more
The Fred Olson Cruise Liner Braemar is docked at the port in Havana, Cuba, April 14, 2008. On Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020 the Dominican Republic turned back the Braemar because some on board showed potential symptoms of the new coronavirus COVID-19.Ramon Espinosa/AP, FILE
A couple days later on March 1, the ship, which belongs to the British company Fred Olsen Cruise Lines, was allowed to dock in Sint Maarten and some passengers were chartered home to the United Kingdom from there.

MORE: California cruise ship guests advised to stay in rooms as coronavirus cases grow nationwide
Afterwards, more passengers were picked up from the Dominican Republic to journey to other ports in the Caribbean.

But then on March 9, the company confirmed that some passengers, who were flown home from Sint Maarten had tested positive for COVID-19 after returning home. Even worse, they were not among those who were showing symptoms while on board a week prior.

That same day, the cruise line announced that "there are five people on board who are currently isolated as they have presented at our Medical Centre with influenza-like symptoms. As a precaution, we are making arrangements to have these crew members tested for COVID-19 Coronavirus when we arrive at the next port of call of Willemstad, Curaçao."

The ship was allowed to dock in Curacao the next day so the individuals could be tested, but nooner was allowed off the ship. Tests for one passenger and five crew members including a doctor came back positive for coronavirus.



The cruise ship MS Braemar operated by Fred Olsen Cruise Lines leaves harbor on July 19, 2018 in Lisbon, Portugal.
The cruise ship MS Braemar operated by Fred Olsen Cruise Lines leaves harbor on July 19, 2018 in Lisbon, Portugal.Corbis via Getty Images, FILE
The infected individuals remained in isolation on board and the ship headed to its final port in Barbados on March 12, but local officials there expressed their concerns and the ship had to change course for the Bahamas -- it's flag state.

The next day, however, Bahamian authorities denied letting anyone off, but allowed the ship to dock to take on food, fuel, and medicine.

The ship sat in the water for days without a solution with 682 passengers and 381 crew members.

MORE: You have 'little recourse' if you get coronavirus on a cruise, maritime law expert warns
Meanwhile, the headcount of passengers and crew members showing symptoms of illness and not tested for COVID-19 escalated to 47.

Finally, on Monday, Cuba said it would let the ship dock at the Mariel Port so passengers could be taken off and fly back home on four chartered flights to the United Kingdom on Wednesday, officials said.



Cuba says this was in response to a request from the United Kingdom's government due to the urgent situation on board and that health protocols will be in place to receive them.

"We are working around the clock to arrange evacuation flights from Cuba to the UK as soon as possible for passengers on the Braemar cruise ship," a spokeswoman with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said.

 
Cruise ship with COVID-19 patients docks in Cuba
March 18, 2020


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The Braemar cruise ship is docked at the port in Mariel, Cuba, Wednesday, March 18, 2020. Weeks after the ship was blocked from disembarking at several ports in the Caribbean due to fears of passengers with possible COVID-19 symptoms, Cuban authorities will assist hundreds of passengers stranded on the boat to disembark to be evacuated to their home countries. The vast majority of people recover from the new coronavirus. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)


HAVANA (AP) — A British cruise ship rejected by Caribbean port officials for weeks docked in Cuba on Wednesday to unload more than 1,000 people on board, including five with confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus.
The Braemar arrived in the port of Mariel early in the morning. Passengers leaving the ship were being taken by medical workers in protective gear to Jose Marti International Airport, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) east in the capital, Havana.
Most of the 682 passengers were expected to arrive in London Thursday morning on planes chartered by Fred. Olsen Cruise Lines. Passengers with the coronavirus or flu-like symptoms were being flown to a British military base on a separate plane.
COPING WITH THE OUTBREAK:

Meanwhile, Cuba announced its first death from the coronavirus, a 61-year-old Italian tourist who was one of 10 confirmed cases on the island.
The Braemar has been sailing the Caribbean since late February and was turned away by the Dominican Republic, Barbados and the Bahamas. Cuba said it is allowing the passengers to transit as an act of humanitarian solidarity.
“Our country has the resources and means necessary to carry out a successful operation,” Health Ministry spokesman José Raúl de Armas told reporters on Wednesday.

 
Cruise ship with COVID-19 patients docks in Cuba
A British cruise ship rejected by Caribbean port officials for weeks has docked in Cuba to unload more than 1,000 people on board, including five with confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus
By
The Associated Press
March 18, 2020, 12:46 PM
2 min read


The Braemar cruise ship is docked at the port in Mariel , Cuba, Tuesday, March 18, 2020. Weeks after the ship was blocked from disembarking at several ports in the Caribbean, due to fears of passengers with possible COVID-19 symptoms, Cuban authorities will assist over 600 passengers stranded on the boat to disembark to be evacuated to their home countries. The vast majority of people recover from the new coronavirus. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
The Braemar cruise ship is docked at the port in Mariel , Cuba, Tuesday, March 18, 2020. Weeks after the ship was blocked from disembarking at several ports in the Caribbean, due to fears of passengers with possible COVID-19 symptoms, Cuban authorities will assist over 600 passengers stranded on the boat to disembark to be evacuated to their home countries. The vast majority of people recover from the new coronavirus. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)The Associated Press
HAVANA -- A British cruise ship rejected by Caribbean port officials for weeks docked in Cuba on Wednesday to unload more than 1,000 people on board, including five with confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus.

The Braemar arrived in the port of Mariel early in the morning. Passengers leaving the ship were being taken by medical workers in protective gear to Jose Marti International Airport, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) east in the capital, Havana.

Most of the 682 passengers were expected to arrive in London Thursday morning on planes chartered by Fred. Olsen Cruise Lines. Passengers with the coronavirus or flu-like symptoms were being flown to a British military base on a separate plane.

Meanwhile, Cuba announced its first death from the coronavirus, a 61-year-old Italian tourist who was one of 10 confirmed cases on the island.

The Braemar has been sailing the Caribbean since late February and was turned away by the Dominican Republic, Barbados and the Bahamas. Cuba said it is allowing the passengers to transit as an act of humanitarian solidarity.

“Our country has the resources and means necessary to carry out a successful operation,” Health Ministry spokesman José Raúl de Armas told reporters on Wednesday.

 
First deceased in Cuba by COVID-19; confirmed cases rise to 10
The deceased is a 61-year-old Italian ―one of the first three confirmed cases on the island― with a history of bronchial asthma, who was hospitalized in the intensive care unit of the Pedro Kourí Institute of Tropical Medicine in a critical state and had presented increasing complications in recent days.
by OnCuba Staff
March 18, 2020
in Cuba
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A Cuban uses a facemask as a measure against the coronavirus in Havana, after the report of confirmed cases on the island. Photo: Yander Zamora / EFE.




Cuba reported this Wednesday its first death from COVID-19, while announcing the confirmation of three new cases, bringing the number to 10.
The deceased is a 61-year-old Italian ―one of the first three confirmed cases on the island― with a history of bronchial asthma and who had presented increasing complications in recent days.

The patient was hospitalized in the intensive care unit of the Pedro Kourí Institute of Tropical Medicine in critical condition and “despite the efforts made by the intensive care team that directly treated him, as well as by the group of experts from the Ministry of Public Health (MINSAP), which gave him permanent follow-up, the developed complications typical of his disease caused his death,” MINSAP reported in a note.
The health authorities deeply regretted what happened and conveyed their condolences to family and friends of the deceased.



As for the three new cases reported, MINSAP reported that they were confirmed this Tuesday night by the molecular biology laboratory of the Provincial Center of Hygiene and Epidemiology of Villa Clara.

The first of them is a 25-year-old Cuban, resident in the city of Santa Clara, who arrived in Cuba on March 8 from Madrid, Spain and started with symptoms on the 14th. After going to the doctor the next day, he was hospitalized in the Manuel Piti Fajardo Hospital of the city where he lives.

The MINSAP note states that “he remains isolated in this center with satisfactory evolution so far” and that “in the focus control carried out, five contacts were detected, all isolated and asymptomatic.”


The second case is a 67-year-old Cuban citizen, also a resident of Santa Clara, who arrived on the island on March 11 from New Jersey, United States, and started showing symptoms a day later. After going to the doctor’s office on the 16th, she was hospitalized in the Manuel Piti Fajardo Hospital, where she remains isolated with satisfactory progress so far. In the focus control carried out, five contacts were detected, which according to the note are isolated and asymptomatic.

For his part, a 77-year-old American who arrived in Cuba on March 8 from California is the third case now confirmed. According to MINSAP, he started with symptoms on the 14th and was identified by the carrier and the guide of the tour group while they were in Trinidad, Sancti Spíritus province. After that, he was transferred to the international clinic in that city in the early hours of the 15th and then hospitalized in the Isolation Center of Villa Clara province.

The Cuban health authorities affirm that “he continues to evolve satisfactorily so far” and that “in the focus control carried out 10 contacts were detected, all isolated and asymptomatic.”

 
I don’t know how many people know this, but Cuba’s healthcare system is always in the top tier of world healthcare. I used to fuck this Salvadorean chick whose sister was sent to Cuba to learn the medicinal trade. I jumped back at first like, “Cuba? Foreal?” But man did she put me in my place real quick. Apparently this is not only a common theme amongst Latin Americans, but Americans as well go down there to study the field.

Their ability to churn out quality with so little has always been impressive to me. If that government wasn’t ass backwards and could pump some capital into the system, they’d be unstoppable.
 
I don’t know how many people know this, but Cuba’s healthcare system is always in the top tier of world healthcare. I used to fuck this Salvadorean chick whose sister was sent to Cuba to learn the medicinal trade. I jumped back at first like, “Cuba? Foreal?” But man did she put me in my place real quick. Apparently this is not only a common theme amongst Latin Americans, but Americans as well go down there to study the field.

Their ability to churn out quality with so little has always been impressive to me. If that government wasn’t ass backwards and could pump some capital into the system, they’d be unstoppable.

Doctors from my country ( suriname ) get trained in cuba.
 
I don’t know how many people know this, but Cuba’s healthcare system is always in the top tier of world healthcare. I used to fuck this Salvadorean chick whose sister was sent to Cuba to learn the medicinal trade. I jumped back at first like, “Cuba? Foreal?” But man did she put me in my place real quick. Apparently this is not only a common theme amongst Latin Americans, but Americans as well go down there to study the field.

Their ability to churn out quality with so little has always been impressive to me. If that government wasn’t ass backwards and could pump some capital into the system, they’d be unstoppable.
I learned a lil about their survival tactics and hustle through hardship through this food tour vid

 
I learned a lil about their survival tactics and hustle through hardship through this food tour vid


It’s like dude said, Cubans got heart and tons of it. Probably why they do so well regardless of having the right tools.

Once this virus calms down, imma plan a trip down there and see what’s up. They’re too close to not be explored.
 
Why is America still enforcing this blockade after all this time after the missile crisis? Rejection of capitalism?
 
The US pharma industry is not going to develop a cure for anything when they can manufacture treatments or shots to be given annually and get paid on the regular. And, they’re going to forbid importing drugs from Cuba. Keeps the stock prices high
 
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The US pharma industry is not going to develop a cure for anything when they can manufacture treatments or shots to be given annually. And, they’re going to forbid importing drugs from Cuba. Keeps the stock prices high
im gonna look into my cuban connects to see if i can get a few orders to hold at the crib but with this travel restriction...
 
The US pharma industry is not going to develop a cure for anything when they can manufacture treatments or shots to be given annually. And, they’re going to forbid importing drugs from Cuba. Keeps the stock prices high

Right on, write on!!! Brotha, you can't tell me this country doesn't have the cure to all health issues facing every single person in this colony!! Your so right, ain't no money in cures!! Welcome to the best country on this planet!! If you have the cadillac of insurance, you also get treated differently!!
 
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