Angola HEALTH AND WELFARE
Women washing clothes in an irrigation canal, a breeding
ground for insects that spread parasitic diseases
Courtesy UNICEF (Maggie Murray-Lee)
In general, the civil war had degraded the quality and
availability of health care since independence. Logistical
problems
with supply and distribution of equipment as well as the
lack of
physical security impeded the provision of health care
throughout
the country, and public health services existed only in
areas under
government control. The rest of the country depended on
international and private relief organizations, although
UNITA
provided a fairly extensive health care system of its own
in rebel-
controlled areas. Poor even by African standards, health
conditions
in Angola were made even worse by the failure of
government health
programs to reach much of the population and by the
movement of a
significant part of the population out of war-ravaged
regions. The
country remained heavily dependent on foreign medical
assistance
because instruction in Angolan medical schools had
progressed
slowly.
Prior to independence, only urban inhabitants, many of
whom
were Portuguese, had access to health facilities. One of
the MPLA's
priorities when it came into power was to provide health
care to
the entire population through a network of health
facilities
overseen by the National Health Service, an organization
subordinate to the Ministry of Health. In theory, basic
health
workers determined the level of care required by each
patient. In
rural areas, village dispensaries and health stations were
staffed
by a nurse, and district health centers provided
outpatient
services, a pharmacy, and up to twenty beds. District
health
centers referred patients to provincial hospitals when
necessary.
In reality, health care was limited and often unavailable
in rural
areas because of the lack of resources and the absence of
government control throughout much of the country. The
government
claimed, however, to run 700 health posts and 140 health
centers in
rural areas in the late 1980s. UNITA, as part of its
general goal
of disrupting government services, impeded and often
prevented the
movement of health care personnel and medical equipment in
many
areas of the country, including regions outside its
immediate
control. Reports from various sources, mostly appearing in
the
Portuguese press, alleged that UNITA forces had attacked
and
destroyed rural medical facilities.
The OMA, the National Union of Angolan Workers (União
Nacional
dos Trabalhadores Angolanos--UNTA), and the Angolan Red
Cross were
also involved in promoting health care through the
provision of
health education, vaccination campaigns, and surveillance
of health
conditions. Particularly prominent was a primary health
care
program provided by the Angolan Red Cross in urban
shantytowns.
Most health-related programs, however, were administered
by foreign
and international organizations with the cooperation of
the Angolan
government. Most of these programs, primarily the
International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and various UN agencies,
provided
emergency relief aid to those affected by the UNITA
insurgency. The
ICRC operated mostly in the provinces of Huambo, Bié, and
Benguela,
administering projects for improving nutrition,
sanitation, and
public health, with a total staff of some 70 people,
assisted by
about 40 physicians, nurses, technicians, and
administrators from
foreign Red Cross societies and an estimated 800 Angolan
relief
workers.
Infectious and parasitic diseases were prevalent among
most of
the population. These diseases flourished in conditions of
inadequate to nonexistent environmental sanitation, poor
personal
hygiene habits, substandard living conditions, and
inadequate to
nonexistent disease control programs. These conditions
caused a
cholera epidemic in 1987 and 1988 that killed almost 2,000
people
in twelve provinces.
Conditions worsened in the 1980s, primarily because the
UNITA
insurgency had resulted in the creation of a massive
internal
refugee population living in tent camps or urban
shantytowns. The
most frequent causes of death included gastrointestinal
diseases,
malaria, respiratory infections, and sexually transmitted
diseases,
all of which were aggravated by endemic malnutrition. The
most
prevalent diseases included acute diarrhea, cholera,
hepatitis,
hymenolepiasis, influenza, leprosy, meningitis,
onchocerciasis,
schistosomiasis, tuberculosis, typhoid, typhus, yaws, and
yellow
fever. In addition, in 1989 approximately 1.5 million
Angolans were
at risk of starvation because of the insurgency and
economic
mismanagement. The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
estimated that Angola had the world's fourth highest
mortality rate
for children under the age of five, despite a program
launched in
1987 by UNICEF to vaccinate children against diphtheria,
measles,
polio, tetanus, tuberculosis, and whooping cough. UNICEF
claimed to
have vaccinated 75 percent of all Angolan children under
the age of
one.
If statistics provided by the chief of the Department
of
Hygiene and Epidemiology in Angola's Ministry of Health
were
accurate, the incidence of acquired immune deficiency
syndrome
(AIDS) in Angola was fairly low by African standards--0.4
percent
of blood donors in Luanda and 2 percent to 4 percent of
adults in
Cabinda tested positive for the AIDS virus. The highest
percentage
of cases was in the northeast region bordering Zaire.
There were
indications, however, that the actual number of AIDS cases
was
significantly higher; the United States-based AIDS Policy
Research
Center claimed a high incidence of the disease among Cuban
troops
based in Angola and Angola-based African National Congress
members.
The biggest problems in determining the extent of the
epidemic were
inadequate communications systems and the lack of modern
blood
testing or computers to tabulate the death toll in rural
areas. In
cities controlled by the government, the World Health
Organization
helped initiate an information and testing campaign in
1988 that
included the distribution of condoms.
Another prevalent health concern centered on the tens
of
thousands of people, many of them women and children,
crippled by
land mines planted by UNITA insurgents and, according to
foreign
relief organizations, by government forces. Estimates on
the number
of amputees ranged from 20,000 to 50,000. Foreign relief
organizations operated orthopedic centers in both
government-
controlled and UNITA-occupied areas, providing artificial
limbs and
physical therapy. The largest facility was the Bomba Alta
Orthopedic Center in Huambo, Angola's second largest city,
which
was operated by the ICRC. Designed essentially to
manufacture
orthopedic prostheses and braces for paralytics and to
provide
physical rehabilitation, in 1986 the center treated 822
patients,
of whom 725 were adults and 97 were children. In 1987 the
center
was staffed with twenty-one Angolan and three foreign
medical
personnel, ten of whom specialized in orthopedic
prostheses for the
lower limbs. The center provided 1,260 patients with
prostheses in
1988.
Most of Angola's estimated forty-five hospitals, all
government
operated, were located in urban areas (see
table 3,
Appendix A).
Conditions in the hospitals, however, were often
deplorable. Poor
sanitation, a lack of basic equipment, and disruptions in
water and
electrical services were common. Trained medical personnel
were in
chronic short supply; in the late 1980s, Angola had only
230
native-born doctors, and only 30 percent of the population
had
access to health services. Most physicians, nurses,
technicians,
and national health advisers were foreigners--principally
Cubans,
East and West Europeans, and South Americans. In 1986
there were
about 800 physicians in Angola (1 per 10,250 people--a
very low
ratio even by African standards) and somewhat more than
10,500
nurses. A Western source reported in February 1989 that
323
physicians, or 41 percent of the total number of doctors
in
government-controlled areas, were Cubans.
The government had placed a high priority on health and
medical
training programs, requiring that all foreign medical
personnel
teach classes in medicine, in addition to performing their
clinical
duties. There were two physician training programs in the
country
(in Luanda and Huambo) and more than twenty nursing
schools,
staffed primarily by Angolan, Cuban, and Soviet teachers.
Most of
the instructors in all medical training programs were
foreign
(primarily Cuban, Yugoslav, Soviet, and East German), and
Angolan
students attended medical training programs in Cuba, East
Germany,
and Poland.
According to a Portuguese source, health care in UNITA-
controlled Angola was well organized and effective. The
rebels
operated a hospital in Jamba, which was staffed by
Portuguese-
trained medical personnel assisted by several French
personnel from
the volunteer organization Doctors Without Borders.
Jamba's
hospital was highly specialized, with the capability to
meet most
of the needs of the surrounding population; the only
unavailable
treatments were neurosurgery and cardiothoracic surgery.
The
hospital was apparently well equipped (probably by South
Africa)
with both instruments and medicines. Although tropical
diseases
were prevalent, war casualties were often the reason for
hospitalization, with most of the wounded having first
been treated
at field hospitals established along the military fronts.
* * *
Sections of this chapter dealing with preindependence
subjects
and general discussions of the structure of society are
based on
parts of larger studies. Such studies include Hermann
Pössinger's
"Interrelations Between Economic and Social Change in
Rural
Africa," Lawrence W. Henderson's "Ethnolinguistic Worlds,"
Douglas
L. Wheeler and René Pélissier's Angola, and Joseph
C.
Miller's Kings and Kinsmen, which includes a
discussion of
the complex character of Mbundu matrilineages.
Much of the more recent information has been culled
from books,
studies, and translations of foreign publications provided
by the
United States Joint Publications Research Service. Keith
Somerville's Angola: Politics, Economics, and
Society
provides an excellent overview of the government's
policies on
education and religion; Linda M. Heywood's "The Dynamics
of Ethnic
Nationalism in Angola" contains a detailed analysis of
UNITA's
aspirations among the Ovimbundu as well as Ovimbundu life
in
present-day Angola; and Angola's official press agency,
Angop, has
provided detailed items pertaining to issues of health and
education. Also of great value are articles in the
Washington
Post and New York Times by foreign
correspondents such
as Blaine Harden and James Brooke dealing with the effects
of the
UNITA insurgency on the rural and urban populations.
Two valuable sources on the grave conditions in which
most
Angolans live are the U.S. Committee for Refugees'
Uprooted
Angolans and the final report of the United States
Private
Voluntary Agency and the United States Government
Assessment Team
to Angola. (For further information and full citations,
see
Bibliography.)
Data as of February 1989
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