- Health care in Turkey
Health care in Turkey is dominated by a centralized state system run by the Ministry of Health. In 2003 the governing Justice and Development Party introduced a sweeping health reform program aimed at increasing the ratio of private to state health provision and making health care available to a larger share of the population. At 7.6 percent of
gross domestic product (GDP) in 2005, Turkey’s public expenditure on national health was below average for a developed country, although the percentage has increased steadily since 2000. In the early 2000s, about 63 percent of health expenditures came from public sources. In 2006 there was one doctor for every 700 people, one nurse for every 580 people, and one hospital bed for every 380 people. The rural population is poorly served by the health-care system, which is much more developed in the western half of the country. Between 80 and 90 percent of the population, including self-employed workers, have health care provided by the national pension system, but the low quality of care encourages the use of private health providers in urban areas. Although the private health industry has grown rapidly since the 1990s, only about 2 percent of the population, mainly in urban areas, has private health insurance. In 2005 about 75 percent of private health expenditures were out-of-pocket rather than being covered by insurance. [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/Turkey.pdf Turkey country profile] .Library of Congress Federal Research Division (August 2008). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain ."]The most frequent causes of death, in order of frequency, are infectious and
parasitic diseases ,cancer ,heart disease , andcerebrovascular diseases . Since the 1980s, the occurrence ofmeasles ,pertussis ,typhoid fever , anddiphtheria has decreased sharply because of improved availability of potable water. More than 80 percent of one-year-olds received inoculations against childhood diseases in 2004. Between 1980 and 2004, the infant mortality rate decreased by 65 percent. In 2007 an estimated 3,700 adults in Turkey were infected by thehuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Reportedly, in the early 2000s sexual activity was the cause of 80 to 90 percent ofHIV cases, anddrug abuse was the cause of 7 percent of cases. Some 260 new cases were reported in 2006. Commercial blood donation has been abolished in order to eliminate that cause of HIV transmission.References
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