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  2. Healthcare in Cuba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_in_Cuba

    The Cuban government operates a national health system and assumes fiscal and administrative responsibility for the health care of all its citizens. [1] All healthcare in Cuba is free to Cuban residents, [2] although challenges include low salaries for doctors, poor facilities, poor provision of equipment, and the frequent absence of essential drugs.

  3. Medical tourism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_tourism

    Medical tourism is the practice of traveling abroad to obtain medical treatment. In the past, this usually referred to those who traveled from less-developed countries to major medical centers in highly developed countries for treatment unavailable at home.

  4. Tourism in Cuba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Cuba

    Cuba has long been a popular attraction for tourists.Between 1915 and 1930, Havana hosted more tourists than any other location in the Caribbean. [8] The influx was due in large part to Cuba's proximity to the United States, where restrictive prohibition on alcohol and other pastimes stood in stark contrast to the island's traditionally relaxed attitude to drinking and other pastimes.

  5. As blackouts, food, fuel and labor shortages in Cuba grow more acute by the day, a trip to the Caribbean island has become a hard sell. Cuban government statistics tell the story: Earlier this ...

  6. Hit by blackouts, Cuba’s tourism industry now braces for Trump

    www.aol.com/hit-blackouts-cuba-tourism-industry...

    The implications for Cuba are clear. With tourism now the island’s principal economic motor, and the main source of foreign currency earnings after remittances, that an important tour operator ...

  7. Cuban medical internationalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban_medical_internationalism

    A Cuban surgeon with scrub cap performing an open air operation in Guinea-Bissau for the PAIGC liberation movement, 1974. A 2007 academic study on Cuban internationalism surveyed the history of the program, noting its broad sweep: "Since the early 1960s, 28,422 Cuban health workers have worked in 37 Latin American countries, 31,181 in 33 African countries, and 7,986 in 24 Asian countries.

  8. Cuba counts on Russians to boost still-ailing tourism sector ...

    www.aol.com/news/cuba-counts-russians-boost...

    Cuba is counting on winter-weary Russians to help boost the Caribbean island nation's ailing tourism sector in 2024, according to the Cuban ambassador in Moscow, after a disappointing 2023 saw ...

  9. Tourism in Latin America and the Caribbean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Latin_America...

    This puts the region twelfth in the world in terms of tourism's absolute contribution to GDP, but first as a proportion of GDP. In terms of employment, 11.3% of the region's jobs depend on tourism either directly or indirectly. [1] It is often described as "the most tourism-dependent region in the world". [13] [14] [15]