1:49 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Health · Comments Off
18 Nov 2008
It was not a surprise to me to find out that Latin@s mesh very well with homeopathic medicine. I don’t know too many Chican@s out there who don’t have stories of their Abuela’s healing ear aches (or any other number of problems) with a little cigar smoke and deep prayers. And this article affirms that connection between home healing and ‘modern’ practices:
But Robinson’s philosophy of using herbs and natural cures is one that many people from Latin America are quick to embrace, said Ingrid Fallaque, Robinson’s translator and intermediary with the Hispanic community. Many Hispanics are familiar with natural remedies from their own countries and feel more safe using them than taking pills, said Fallaque, who is from Peru.
“When I talk to people, that’s the most important thing for them,” Fallaque said. “They grew up with it. Even my own mother used to give me herbs for everything.”
I love that there is this service available to working class Latin@s–where I live, homeopathic healing is something reserved almost exclusively for rich white folks. Nobody else can afford it.
But even as I am so glad to see this wonderful practice, it also kinda makes me mad–healing of this type didn’t just pop out of nowhere. It comes from our mothers and their mothers. Why are our mothers not recognized for the healers that they are (and I am speaking generally here, not of the woman that this story highlights)–specifically through monetary/economic recognition? Why is it that major companies (because believe me, homeopathic healing is a heeeuge business!) can ‘patent’ the knowledge of healing so that we are paying *them* for the knowledge that we supplied them with?
11:35 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba|Politics|Venezuela · 1 Comment
8 Feb 2007
45 visiting Cuban doctors sent by Castro to help out in rural areas of Venezuela have fled to Colombia, from where they hope to ask the U.S. government for asylum.
According to 20 Minutos, the doctors’ exodus wasn’t organized, as they have been leaving Venezuela into Colombia one by one, where they are allowed to stay for a maximum of 6 months.
To date, the U.S. government has not granted asylum to any of them, and the International Herald Tribune reports that in spite of a policy change which allows for Cuban medical professionals working abroad to enter the U.S. after a routine background check, they are currently in a limbo waiting for a response and at least 2 doctors have already been rejected.
Why did they flee? They say they didn’t plan it that way, but that they were being treated poorly:
“We couldn’t call our families or go out after 5 p.m. The Venezuelan national guard and Cuban authorities watched our every move,” Viamonte said. “We never planned on abandoning our duty, but we got tired of being treated like slaves.”
Via / 20 Minutos and IHT
1:29 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bolivia|Cuba|Health · 1 Comment
17 Oct 2006
After having already “donated” 20 hospitals to Bolivia, the Cuban government is matching that with another 20, with the help of Venezuela.
Last September, Cuba finished construction on and the equipping of 20 hospitals in rural communities.In addition, Cuba has also built 7 opthamological centers where the ‘Operación Milagro’ progam is carried out, which are free eye operations for the poor.
These hospitals now have the equipement necessary to do complete diagnoses, from X-rays, ultrasounds, EKGs and lab work, as well as operating rooms and specialized staff, said the minister.
Ten of the 20 new hospitals will follow this pattern and the other ten will receive only basic equipment to get them up and running.
According to Spain’s 20 Minutos, the Cuban Medical Brigade currently has 1,681 of its doctors and nurses in Bolivia, and doctors have performed over 36,000 cataract surgeries.
Earlier this year, Bolivian doctors protested the presence of the Cuban physicians, accusing them of taking away their jobs.
Via / 20 Minutos and BBC News
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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