Now,
the 37-year-old pet-bird breeder is unexpectedly pregnant again, and
Cuba's communist government is doing all it can to make sure she has a
successful delivery. Three months before her due date, she's living
fulltime at a special government medical care center for women with
high-risk pregnancies as part of a broad campaign to drive up a birth
rate that has fallen to the lowest in Latin America.
Years of
fewer births mean the number of working-age people in Cuba is expected
to shrink starting next year, terrible news for an island attempting to
jumpstart its stagnant centrally planned economy.
The
country's governing Council of Ministers announced this week that it
will soon unveil yet-unspecified financial incentives for couples
considering starting families. It had already expanded maternity, and in
some cases paternity leave, to a full year with pay.
The
government also has opened dozens of special centers for infertile
couples and special maternity units. At one of the centers in central
Havana, Gonzalez and 50 other expectant mothers chat and watch
television as nurses check their blood pressure and happy babies smile
down from posters on the wall.
"We've been evaluating this low
birth rate for years," said Roberto Alvarez Fumero, chief of the
maternity and child health unit at Cuba's Ministry of Health. "Now we're
taking action to improve sexual and reproductive health, which can help
drive up the country's birth rate."Cuba's baby problem is a result of some of the most notable successes of its 55-year-old socialist revolution: more working women with professional jobs and universal access to medical care, which includes contraception and free, legal abortion. It's also a product of its failures: a lackluster economy, persistently high levels of emigration by young people and an island-wide housing shortage.
"People in Cuba wait because they don't have the economic or housing situation they need and they know that life gets tougher with a baby," Gonzalez said. "I'm definitely only going to have one child."
Analysts estimate that Cuba has a deficit of 500,000 homes, a number growing because of the cash-poor state's difficulties in maintaining publicly owned buildings. So many young people share homes with uncles, parents, grandparents and cousins.
They also earn less than $50 a month. Despite many free or highly subsidized services like food, education, health, telephone and electricity, many Cubans depend on higher-quality imported products that can only be had at high prices. A pack of diapers can go for $10.
With less time at home, little space or privacy and salaries that don't cover basic baby supplies, many couples are putting plans for children on hold, or having only one.
"You wait to have economic stability to bring a child into the world," said Maria Isabel de Armas, a childless 31-year-old unemployed waitress.
Cuba
has long prided itself on care of pregnant women and newborns, and
officials often boast of an infant mortality rate lower than that of the
United States.
Now it's
going further, opening special centers for infertile couples in each of
the country's 168 municipalities. The government says it treated 3,000
couples for infertility in 2010, and more than doubled that number in
the following three years. The country has also tripled the number of
special reproductive technology centers, to three, and there have been
500 births by artificial insemination.
"I
always wanted a child but it never came, and suddenly at 46, I got
pregnant," said Lucia Quesada, a bank worker who became the oldest women
in Havana's special maternity unit after she and her partner
unexpectedly conceived naturally. "I was really nervous but I said, 'I'm
going to try to have it,' and here I am."
For others less eager, Cuba's liberal abortion policies have made it easy to wait.
Twenty-one
percent of Cuban women between the ages of 15 and 54 say they had had
at least one abortion, according to a 2009 poll on fertility by National
Office of Information and Statistics. Eighty percent of the population
use contraception including IUD's, condoms or sterilization.
The
average Cuban woman had nearly five children in the 1960s but that
number dropped below the replacement rate of two children per woman in
1978 and hasn't recovered since. Although it started climbing slowly
again in 2006, the birth rate of 1.7 in 2012 remains well below the
regional average of 2.3 children per woman.
As a result, doctors are going further than ever to see older and at-risk mothers like Gonzalez take their pregnancy to term.
"We don't stigmatize it these days," Alvarez said. "This new policy has changed our doctors' way of thinking."
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