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Cuba’s socialist go-it-alone medicine

Cuba's approach to medicine has been both a success and a failure, argues S.聽M. Reid-Henry in The Cuban Cure: Reason and resistance in global science

WHEN a crippling US trade embargo blocked Cuba鈥檚 access even to antibiotics, Fidel Castro fought back by fostering home-grown medical expertise. Today, Cuba鈥檚 medical internationalism is legendary, with a network of volunteer doctors working round the globe. In the 1980s, Cuba also set out to build a socialist biotechnology industry, one that would put public health before profit, prevention before cure.

Did it succeed? Yes and no, argues S. M. Reid-Henry in this highly nuanced and scholarly account. An effective meningitis B vaccine and novel cancer drugs were landmark achievements, but Cuban attempts to win scientific recognition were repeatedly stymied. All the same, the Cubans did achieve fresh perspectives and approaches. 鈥淭his, then, is the cure that Cuba might be said to offer,鈥 he concludes. 鈥淣o magic bullet to be sure, but an attempt, at least, to produce a more social science.鈥

The Cuban Cure: Reason and resistance in global science

S. M. Reid-Henry

University of Chicago Press

Topics: Books and art

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