<p>After the 1959 Cuban Revolution hundreds of thousands of Cuban refugees came to Miami. With this influx the city&#x2019;s health care system was overwhelmed not just by the number of patients but also by the differences in culture. Mainstream medicine was often inaccessible or inadequate to Miami&#x2019;s growing community of Latin American and Caribbean immigrants. Instead many sought care from alternative often unlicensed health practitioners. During the 1960s a recently arrived Cuban feeling ill might have visited a local <i>cl&#xED;nica</i> a quasi-legal storefront doctor&#x2019;s office or a <i>santero</i> a priest in the Afro-Cuban religion of Lukum&#xED; or Santer&#xED;a. This exceptionally diverse medical scene would catch the attention of anthropologists who made Miami&#x2019;s multiethnic population into a laboratory for cross-cultural care. By the 1990s the medical establishment in Miami had matured into a complex and culturally informed health-delivery system generating models of care that traveled far beyond the city. Some cl&#xED;nicas had transformed into lucrative HMOs Santer&#xED;a became legally protected by the courts and medical anthropology played a significant role in the rise of global health. Catherine Mas shows how immigrants reshaped American medicine while the clinic became a crucial site for navigating questions of wellness citizenship and culture.</p>
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