Ariana Campero

Ariana Campero Nava (born 21 September 1986) is a Bolivian doctor who was Minister of Health in the Cabinet of Bolivia.[1][2] At the time of her appointment, at age 28, she was the youngest minister in the cabinet.

Ariana Campero
Minister of Heath
In office
23 January 2015  30 May 2018
PresidentEvo Morales
Preceded byJuan Carlos Calvimontes
Succeeded byRodolfo Rocabado
Personal details
Born (1986-09-21) 21 September 1986
NationalityBolivian
Political partyMAS-IPSP

Biography

Ariana Campero was born in the city of Cochabamba on September 21, 1986, where she completed high school. Her university studies were in the field of medicine. She was in one of the first cohorts of Bolivian students to receive scholarships to study in Cuba during the early years of the Evo Morales government. There she studied at the Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina in Havana, graduating as a doctor. She returned to Bolivia in 2011 and she is trying to bring Cuban Doctors to replace Bolivian doctors.

Campero was assigned to work as a community doctor supporting the Juana Azurduy bonus program for pregnant and post-partum women in Aiquile Municipality, Cochabamba. For ten months she served as an advisor to Health Minister Juan Carlos Calvimontes.

Public service

On April 30, 2014, Campero was sworn in as Vice Minister of Health, replacing Martín Maturano. She held that office until January 2015, when she was elevated to Minister of Health. She became the youngest minister in Evo Morales' cabinet at just 28 years of age.[3][4][5][6]

As health minister, in October 2015, she launched a program for universal lactation, also known as a pre-natal subsidy program, designed to give healthy food products to all pregnant women beginning in the fourth month of pregnancy.

On October 14, 2015, Campero was designated the president of the Andean Regional Health Organization.[7]

On December 6, 2017, Campero announced her support for legislation to allow abortion in Bolivia for "students, adolescents, or girls", as a measure to reduce the maternal mortality rate.[8]

References

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