Current:Home > MarketsKenya ends arrangement to swap doctors with Cuba. The deal was unpopular with Kenyan doctors -DollarDynamic
Kenya ends arrangement to swap doctors with Cuba. The deal was unpopular with Kenyan doctors
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:47:27
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Kenya’s government announced Wednesday it would not be renewing a 6-year-old deal that saw Cuban doctors employed in Kenya while those from the East African country travelled to Cuba for specialized training.
The program was unpopular with Kenya’s main doctors union, partly because the Cuban doctors received more than double the average salary of their Kenyan counterparts. Critics argued that money would be better spent on Kenya’s medical infrastructure and on its own doctors.
Health Minister Nakumicha Wafula announced the end of the Cuba deal at a meeting with health industry workers in the capital, Nairobi, and was met with applause and shouts of “yes, yes!” Wafula said the ministry would ensure that the country’s health workers are “well taken care of.”
Under the deal signed in 2017, 50 Kenyans were sent to Cuba to undergo specialized training, while 100 Cubans were dispatched to county level hospitals in Kenya to help improve services.
The move was heavily criticized at the time by legislators and the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, which said it was a waste of resources when the country was struggling with thousands of unemployed doctors and specialists.
The union said the money used to pay the Cuban doctors’ high salaries could have been used to hire Kenyan doctors or to buy medical equipment for local hospitals which often lack basic facilities and medicines.
Kenya’s Salaries and Renumeration Commission has said that each Cuban doctor was paid a monthly salary of about $5,300, while local doctors in the same category received between $1600 and $2300. The Cuban doctors also had better travel and housing allowances
Doctors and nurses Kenya have often gone on strike demanding better pay and working conditions.
veryGood! (315)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Texas heat brings the state’s power grid closest it has been to outages since 2021 winter storm
- LSU, women's basketball coach Kim Mulkey agree to record 10-year, $36 million extension
- Bruce Springsteen postpones September shows to treat peptic ulcer disease
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Dozens of migrants rescued off Greek island of Lesbos. Search is under way for woman feared missing
- Little Amal, a 12-foot puppet of a Syrian refugee, began its journey across the US in Boston
- ‘That ‘70s Show’ actor Danny Masterson could get decades in prison at sentencing for 2 rapes
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- New data shows increase in abortions in states near bans compared to 2020 data
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Rollover school bus crash caught on doorbell video in Wisconsin
- A whale of a discovery: Alabama teen, teacher discover 34-million-year-old whale skull
- 'We're coming back': New Washington Commanders owners offer vision of team's future
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Police manhunt for Danelo Cavalcante presses on; schools reopen, perimeter shifts
- Daughters carry on mom's legacy as engine builders for General Motors
- The UK is rejoining the European Union’s science research program as post-Brexit relations thaw
Recommendation
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
2 Trump co-defendants get trial date, feds eye another Hunter Biden indictment: 5 Things podcast
Germany arrests 2 Syrians, one of them accused of war crimes related to a deadly attack in 2013
Trump may try to have his Georgia election interference case removed to federal court
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Father files first-of-its-kind wrongful death suit against Maui, Hawaii over fires
Erythritol is sugar substitute. But what's in it and why is it so popular?
Congressional watchdog describes border wall harm, says agencies should work together to ease damage