www.elciudadano.com ·
Humanitarian Impact of U S Blockade Against Cuba Is Incalculable Recent Report Reveals Negative Effects on Cuban Healthcare System
News Analysis — AI Analysis
Original analysis generated by News Analysis. This is our own commentary on the story, not the publisher's article text.
A report cited by Xinhua claims that U.S. sanctions against Cuba have caused significant humanitarian damage, particularly to the healthcare system. The article highlights a purported 148 percent increase in the infant mortality rate between 2018 and 2025, attributing this rise primarily to the tightening of sanctions initiated under the Trump administration. Furthermore, it details negative impacts on medical care, energy supply, and essential goods distribution.
Key points
- The article cites a report suggesting Cuba's infant mortality rate rose from 4.0 per 1,000 live births in 2018 to 9.9 in 2025.
- Cuban officials argue that the U.S. blockade is the main obstacle to social development and has caused 'incalculable' damage.
- The sanctions are reported to have negatively affected cancer survival rates, which declined from 85 percent to 65% since the oil embargo began.
- Medical care is impacted, with over 100,000 patients remaining on surgical waiting lists and difficulties in providing hemodialysis treatments.
- The U.S. oil blockade has worsened Cuba's energy crisis, leading to prolonged power outages and fuel shortages.
Claims assessed
- VerifiableThe infant mortality rate in Cuba increased from 4.0 per 1,000 live births in 2018 to 9.9 in 2025.
- UnverifiedThe increase in the infant mortality rate is primarily attributed to the tightening of sanctions against Cuba that began under Donald Trump’s administration in 2017.
- VerifiableCuba's survival rate for children with cancer has dropped from 85 percent to 65% since the oil embargo was implemented.
- VerifiableThe U.S. blockade affects over 100,000 patients who are waiting for surgery and complicates hemodialysis treatment for 2,888 patients.
Missing context
The article does not provide independent verification or counter-arguments regarding the reported statistics (e.g., IMR data) nor does it detail the specific mechanisms by which sanctions prevent access to medical supplies or energy resources beyond general claims of difficulty.
Topic context
The full article is on the original publisher site.
AI insight
AI-generatedSanctions are pushing local revenue and foreign exchange pass-through pressure on service providers (EM_MARKETS) and causing moderate operational disruption in healthcare and energy sectors. Key risk: The predicted magnitude of decline is likely overstated due to existing national inventory buffers and alternative regional supply chains.
The article describes the humanitarian and public health impact of U.S. sanctions/blockade on Cuba. The primary commercial mechanism is a severe input cost shock (medical supplies, energy imports) leading to reduced capacity utilization in the healthcare sector and operational disruptions across essential services. This is highly country-specific (Cuba) and affects local Cuban currency revenue streams and foreign exchange pass-through for critical goods.
Signals our AI researcher identified
Extracted by our AI model from this article and related public sources — not direct quotes from the publisher.
- U.S. blockade cited as cause of humanitarian damage in Cuba.
- Infant mortality rate increased from 4.0 (2018) to 9.9 (2025).
- Decline in cancer survival rates from 85% to 65%.
- Power outages exceeding 20 hours due to oil embargo.
- Impact affects over 100,000 surgical waiting list patients.
Affected products & commodities
- Medical equipment/supplies
- Pharmaceuticals
- Fuel/Energy sources
Supply-chain signals
- International medical supply chain access to Cuba
- Oil imports and energy infrastructure operation in Cuba
Historical parallels
- (not specified)
This analysis would be wrong if
If humanitarian aid channels or non-sanctioned bilateral agreements successfully stabilize the import flow of essential medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, and refined fuels.
Local energy shortages due to sanctions are causing moderate downward pressure on immediate fuel demand. The impact is visible over the next 48 hours.
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Sector impact at a glance
- COMMODITY_OILshort
- EM_MARKETSmid
- EM_MARKETSshort
- GLOBAL_HEALTHCAREmid
- GLOBAL_HEALTHCAREshort
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