- Health in Kyrgyzstan
In the post-Soviet era,
Kyrgyzstan 's health system has suffered increasing shortages of health professionals and medicine. Kyrgyzstan must import nearly all its pharmaceuticals. [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/Kyrgyzstan.pdf Kyrgyzstan country profile] .Library of Congress Federal Research Division (January 2007). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain ."] The increasing role of private health services has supplemented the deteriorating state-supported system. In the early 2000s, public expenditures on health care decreased as a percentage of total expenditures, and the ratio of population to number of doctors increased substantially, from 296 per doctor in 1996 to 355 per doctor in 2001. A national primary-care health system, theManas Program , was adopted in 1996 to restructure the Soviet system that Kyrgyzstan inherited. The number of people participating in this program has expanded gradually, and province-level family medicine training centers now retrain medical personnel. A mandatorymedical insurance fund was established in 1997.Largely because of drug shortages, in the late 1990s and early 2000s the incidence of
infectious diseases , especiallytuberculosis , has increased. The major causes of death are cardiovascular and respiratory conditions. Official estimates of the incidence ofhuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have been very low (830 cases were officially reported as of February 2006, but the actual number was estimated at 10 times that many). The concentration of HIV cases in Kyrgyzstan’s narcotics-injecting and prison populations makes an increase in HIV incidence likely. More than half of the cases have been inOsh , which is on a major narcotics trafficking route.References
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