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Newborn Identification Bracelet (Manilla de Identificación de Recién Nacido)

Object/Artifact

Manufactured plastic-and-paper hospital newborn ID bracelet issued in a Havana maternity hospital on September 1, 1974, bearing the mother's name and clinical history number in handwritten ink under a clear cover, with original plastic buckle closure. The form is what María A. Cabrera Arús describes in her Cuba Material blog as a "manilla original," manufactured specifically for the purpose, distinguishing it from the improvised, nylon-strip bracelets she documents from the preceding year. The inscription identifies the mother of the newborn (standard Cuban maternity-hospital practice of the period), not the infant directly.

2025.1.6

ID beloged to María R. Cabrera Arús

The Cabrera Arús family collection

María A. Arús Caraballo collection

2025.1

9/1/1974

1970s

Havana

Cuba

Caribbean

Central America

Name

English

Ink

The printed form fields are in English while the handwritten content is in Spanish.

Note

One side

Maria Antonia - Aruz Caraballo - 35510

Spanish

Patients name and number

Pencil

Note

Another side

Peso 7,3 lbs. Hora 1:55 pm femenino

Spanish

Weight 7.3 lbs. Time 1:55 pm Female

Pencil

Plastic

Very Good

María R. Cabrera Arús

María A. Arús Caraballo

Hospital Materno Infantil Ramón González Coro

MINSAP

producer

Havana

Cuba

Caribbean

Central America

María A. Cabrera Arús's Cuba Material blog post "Brazaletes de identidad para recién nacidos" (August 4, 2024, cubamaterial.com) discusses this and another bracelet from her family together with additional examples from 1980. Her analysis observes that: - Her own 1973 bracelet was "improvised" — made from nylon repurposed from another medical implement and secured with a knot - Her sister's 1974 bracelet — the present object — is a "manilla original", i.e., a purpose-manufactured product, much shorter than the improvised version - The transition between 1973 and 1974 thus appears to mark a turn from improvisation to standardized hospital supply within Cuban obstetric practice The 1974 bracelet is therefore positioned at an important inflection point in Cuban maternal-infant healthcare material culture.

Newborn identification practices in Latin American maternity hospitals in this period typically recorded the mother's identifying information (name, clinical history number, sometimes date/time and weight of birth) rather than naming the infant directly — because the legal name of the newborn would often not be registered with the civil registry until days or weeks later. The bracelet's job is to ensure the baby cannot be confused with another mother's child during the hospital stay. The inscription here — mother's name + clinical history number "355-10" — fits this standard practice exactly. Comparable Spanish-American hospital practices are documented in studies like Lomuto et al., "Identificación del recién nacido y medidas de prevención…" (Hospital Sardá, Buenos Aires), which describes the same maternal-identifier convention.