- Health in North Korea
North Korea has a national medical service and health insurance system. As of 2000, some 99 percent of the population had access tosanitation , and 100 percent had access to water, but water was not alwayspotable . Medical treatment is free. In the past, there reportedly has been one doctor for every 700 inhabitants and one hospital bed for every 350 inhabitants. Health expenditures in 2001 were 2.5 percent of gross domestic product, and 73 percent of health expenditures were made in the public sector. There were no reported human immuno-deficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS ) cases as of 2007. However, it is estimated that between 500,000 and 3 million people died fromfamine in the 1990s, and a 1998United Nations (UN)World Food Program report revealed that 60 percent of children suffered frommalnutrition , and 16 percent were acutely malnourished. UN statistics for the period 1999–2001 reveal that North Korea’s daily per capita food supply was one of the lowest in Asia, exceeding only that ofCambodia ,Laos , andTajikistan , and one of the lowest worldwide. Because of continuing economic problems, food shortages and chronic malnutrition prevail in the 2000s. [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/North_Korea.pdf North Korea country profile] .Library of Congress Federal Research Division (July 2007). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain ."]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.