Colombia National Health Care System
Mothers receive instruction in dental hygiene
Courtesy United States Agency for International Development
In the late 1980s, the national public health care
infrastructure was built around a network of approximately
640
hospitals classified as local (73 percent), regional (17
percent),
specialized (8 percent), and university (2 percent)
hospitals.
There were 35,000 beds in the public sector of the system,
excluding those available at health care centers and basic
care
units.
The other three major components of the health care
infrastructure were the ISS, the paragovernmental social
security
institutions, and the private sector. The ISS and related
organizations managed approximately 6,500 beds (13
percent);
paragovernmental social security institutions handled
around 2,300
(4 percent); and the private sector--one of the most
dynamic
components of the system--had reached 8,000 beds (15
percent). The
total availability of hospital beds amounted to only
approximately
51,800--a figure that was equivalent to a ratio of 1.9
beds per
1,000 citizens. This ratio was less than half of the
capacity for
the health sectors of Costa Rica, Chile, Argentina, or
even Brazil
and not far from the performance of the most
underdeveloped
countries in the region.
Nevertheless, approximately 80 percent of the
population had
access to some form of medical and health care services.
The
national public health system offered coverage to 46
percent of the
population, the private sector to 16 percent, the ISS
system to 12
percent, and other social security organizations to 6
percent. The
remaining 20 percent lacked formal health care coverage
and had
access only sporadically to professional medical
consultation.
Furthermore, a considerable proportion of the 12.7 million
people
served by the national public health system did not have
real
access to modern forms of diagnosis and treatment.
Urban and rural residents experienced significant
differences
in access to health care. The coverage in the three
largest cities-
-Bogotá, Medellín, and Cali--was almost 95 percent. At the
rural
level, the best services were delivered by the departments
in the
coffee-growing areas. At the bottom of the scale--in terms
of
quality and coverage--were the rural areas in the
non-Andean
regions as well as the marginal neighborhoods in
medium-sized and
small cities.
In 1985 the country had an estimated 20,500 physicians.
Thus,
Colombia had almost one physician for every 1,300
inhabitants, a
good ratio by international standards. The data were
misleading,
however, in terms of the real availability of medical care
for the
population. Almost 70 percent of physicians were located
in the
twenty-five major cities, which together contained only 45
percent
of the population. The problem with professional nursing
care was
even worse. There was an even greater urban concentration
of nurse
professionals than of physicians.
The medical doctor was a very important social actor in
Colombian history. The doctor's status in the community
usually
gave him or her responsibilities that went far beyond
health and
healing, such as acting as mediator of disputes and
electoral power
broker. The social reputation and political power of
physicians
normally was accompanied by above-average economic
rewards, thus
creating a very attractive professional path for social
mobility.
Socially, the title of "doctor" was highly desirable and
was a goal
for the youth of middle-class families that could afford
the high
cost of this type of education.
Despite a doubling in the number of medical schools
between the
early 1970s and the late 1980s, university facilities were
not able
to cope with the huge demand for medical education. In
addition,
although many medical graduates had not been absorbed by
the health
system, they were generally not willing to move into the
nonurban
areas where they were most desperately needed. The high
cost of
medical education--considered as an investment with
unusually high
expectations for return--discouraged physicians from
considering
voluntary moves to areas in need that offered considerably
less
profitability.
Data as of December 1988
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