- Health in Yemen
Despite the significant progress
Yemen has made to expand and improve its health care system over the past decade, the system remains severely underdeveloped. Total expenditures on health care in 2002 constituted 3.7 percent ofgross domestic product . In that same year, the per capita expenditure for health care was very low, as compared with otherMiddle East ern countries—US$58 according toUnited Nations statistics and US$23 according to theWorld Health Organization . According to theWorld Bank , the number of doctors in Yemen rose by an average of more than 7 percent between 1995 and 2000, but as of 2004 there were still only three doctors per 10,000 persons. In 2003 Yemen had only 0.6 hospital beds available per 1,000 persons. [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/Yemen.pdf Yemen country profile] .Library of Congress Federal Research Division (December 2006). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain ."]Health care services are particularly scarce in rural areas; only 25 percent of rural areas are covered by health services, as compared with 80 percent of urban areas.
Emergency services , such asambulance service andblood banks , are non-existent. Most childhood deaths are caused by illnesses for whichvaccines exist or that are otherwise preventable. According to theJoint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS , in 2003 an estimated 12,000 people in Yemen were living withhuman immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS).References
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