Online Program

334193
US-Cuba relations: Opening doors to expand nurse leadership and policy development


Monday, November 2, 2015

Maria Elena Ruiz, PhD, RN, FNP-BC, School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
Adey Nyamathi, ANP, PhD, FAAN, School of Nursing, UCLA School of Nursing, Los Angeles, CA
Inese Verzemnieks, PhD, RN, PHN, CNL, School of Nursing, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA
The UCLA School of Nursing expanded its international programs and now integrates a global health experience to Cuba. Supervised by faculty, students earn public health nursing credits while becoming immersed in Cuba’s prevention focused primary care model.  Faculty designed the eight day field work program, where students experience Cuba’s integrative physician/nurse team model, observe delivery of care, assess health data, visit maternity homes, senior care centers, policlinics, and conduct exchanges with health leaders and community workers.

Prior to travel, students completed assignments, including research and other materials that required them to critically assess Cuba’s primary care model. Students also participated in pre/post conference discussions and maintained clinical logs and reflective journal entries that required them to integrate what they experienced during the field visits and to critically assess the transferability of this health model to the U.S.

Cuba’s model of care will be discussed, along with the insight provided from the student’s reflective writings, as these suggest challenges in the U.S. health policies, as well as opportunities for improving the health system and decreasing health disparities. The widening of US-Cuba relations provides an opportunity for countries to learn how to overcome barriers and to develop innovative global health policies. 

Adopting the strong aspects of the Cuba model among vulnerable populations opens the door for intersectorial collaboration including policy, businesses, job opportunities, social services, etc., while also engaging stakeholders for structural and process changes. For example, with immunization programs, homeless and drug users/criminal justice, as each needs all the environmental supports they can get.

Learning Areas:

Diversity and culture
Implementation of health education strategies, interventions and programs
Planning of health education strategies, interventions, and programs
Public health or related nursing
Systems thinking models (conceptual and theoretical models), applications related to public health

Learning Objectives:
Compare and contrast Cuba's integrative prevention focused primary care model and the U.S. system. Discuss the strengths of the Cuban model for intersectorial application to vulnerable populations in the U.S.

Keyword(s): International Health, Nurses/Nursing

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I am faculty member at the UCLA School of Nursing, the coordinator for the Latin America-Cuba public health program and supervised students for the Cuba experience.
Any relevant financial relationships? No

I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.

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