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Cuba's
Long Lie Expectancy
Investors
Infosearch:
José Cadenas
Analyst
Bureau Chief
USA
Research Dept
La Nueva Cuba
April 28, 2007
Media: Communist
regimes are known to falsify and distort statistics, but they rarely
get away with it unless Western media play along. They scored a
big hit recently with data about Cuba's storied life expectancy.
In a widely
distributed news story, the Associated Press last week explained
why Cubans were living such long, healthy lives under their 47-year
totalitarian dictatorship. Taking the word of Cuban officials, it
credited the island's "mild climate," "free medical
care" and "low-stress Caribbean lifestyle." Right
on cue, CBS gave "thanks to the socialist island state's free
health-care system" that's there so "fortunately."
But media claims
that socialism lets Cubans live longer makes no sense. Cuba's living
conditions portend anything but a long life. The media reports,
moreover, often misinterpret the data. "The average Joe reading
these stories doesn't have all the background, and can be fooled
by propaganda," says Cuban author Humberto Fontova.
Life expectancy
at birth, as defined by Oxford University demographers, is how many
years a baby would live if patterns of mortality at the time of
his birth remain steady through his lifetime. It correlates closely
with infant mortality, because the longer a person lives, the longer
he can expect to advance past the average.
According to
2007 CIA World Factbook cited by AP, Cubans live an average of 77.08
years, with men at 74.85 and women at 79.43. But in its praise-filled
report, the AP missed that this actually represents a decline in
life expectancy. The year before, the average was 77.41 with men
at 75.11 and women at 79.89.
This may reflect
that Cubans aren't living in steady conditions through their lifetimes.
With a 1990 cutoff of aid from the Soviet Union, there has been
a huge decline in living standards, according to University of Pittsburgh
professor Carmelo Mesa-Lagos, who is recognized as a leader in Cuban
demographics.
In an interview
with IBD, he explained that Cubans often do live long lives, but
not because of balmy weather, good health care or any other reasons
cited by Cuba's propagandists.
From sanitation
to housing, "Cubans have experienced deterioration in all health
indicators," Mesa-Lagos said. As a result, Cubans have seen
an uptick in diseases such as hepatitis and acute diarrhea. The
increase of water-borne diseases does not correlate with long life
spans anywhere else in the world, he said.
Food and critical
vitamin shortages, meanwhile, were also major problems in Cuba,
notes Andy S. Gomez, assistant provost of the University of Miami's
Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies. "A deficit
of Vitamin C and a lack of appropriate diet has caused Cubans to
suffer eye diseases," he said.
Mesa-Lagos agreed,
saying that a few years ago, elderly Cubans experienced an epidemic
of sudden blindness due to vitamin shortages. Worse yet, a third
of Cuban doctors had been shipped to Venezuela, leaving many with
no access to any health care at all, he added.
The only area
in which Cuba's data are in line with the rest of the world is infant
mortality, Mesa-Lagos said. Low readings there normally correlate
with longevity, and Cubans' long average life span is technically
in line with its low infant mortality, he said.
"But how
do you achieve this?" Mesa-Lagos asks. Countries differ, for
example, in how they count births. If a newborn doesn't live more
than 24 hours, it often doesn't show up in infant mortality statistics.
The figure is depressed even further by abortion, he said, noting
that Cubans are often pressured into abortions if there is a chance
a baby might require extra medical care.
At seven in
10 pregnancies, Cuba's abortion rate is Latin America's highest,
said Fontova. Cuba also has one of the world's highest suicide rates,
which also doesn't show up in expectancy data.
Gomez said Cuba's
sunny life span numbers seem to conceal a larger issue the
country's rapidly aging population. It has 11.2 million people,
and only 2.2 million were born after 1992. If its young people emigrate,
Cuba's statistical average life expectancy could be even higher,
he said. And that's nothing to brag about.
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