Ethiopia Health and Welfare
Nurses comfort a patient at a hospital in Addis
Ababa.
Courtesy World Vision (Bruce Brander)
The main cause of many of Ethiopia's health problems is the
relative isolation of large segments of the population from
the modern sector. Additionally, widespread illiteracy
prevents the dissemination of information on modern health
practices. A shortage of trained personnel and insufficient
funding also hampers the equitable distribution of health
services. Moreover, most health institutions were
concentrated in urban centers prior to 1974 and were
concerned with curative rather than preventive medicine.
Western medicine came to Ethiopia during the last quarter
of the nineteenth century with the arrival of missionary
doctors, nurses, and midwives. But there was little progress
on measures to cope with the acute and endemic diseases that
debilitated large segments of the population until the
government established its Ministry of Public Health in
1948. The World Health Organization (WHO), the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), and the United States
Agency for International Development (AID) provided
technical and financial assistance to eliminate the sources
of health problems.
In addition to establishing hospitals, health centers, and
outpatient clinics, the government initiated programs to
train Ethiopian health care personnel so that they could
supplement the private institutions that existed in a few
major urban centers. The few government campaigns that
exhorted the people to cooperate in the fight against
disease and unhealthful living conditions were mainly
directed at the urban population.
By the mid-1970s, the number of modern medical facilities
had increased relatively slowly--particularly in rural
areas, where at least 80 percent of the people still did not
have access to techniques or services that would improve
health conditions (see table 8;
table 9,
Appendix). Forty-six percent of the hospital beds were concentrated
in Addis
Ababa, Asmera, Dire Dawa, and Harer. In the absence of
modern medical services, the rural population continued to
rely on traditional folk medicine. According to official
statistics, in 1983/84 there were 546 physicians in the
country to serve a population of 42 million, a ratio of
roughly one physician per 77,000 people, one of the worst
ratios in the world. Less than 40 percent of the population
was within reach of modern health services.
As in most developing countries in the early 1990s,
Ethiopia's main health problems were communicable diseases
caused by poor sanitation and malnutrition and exacerbated
by the shortage of trained manpower and health facilities.
Mortality and morbidity data were based primarily on health
facility records, which may not reflect the real incidence
of disease in the population. According to such records, the
leading causes of hospital deaths were dysentery and
gastroenteritis (11 percent), tuberculosis (11 percent),
pneumonia (11 percent), malnutrition and anemia (7 percent),
liver diseases including hepatitis (6 percent), tetanus (3
percent), and malaria (3 percent). The leading causes of
outpatient morbidity in children under age five were upper
respiratory illnesses, diarrhea, eye infections including
trachoma, skin infections, malnutrition, and fevers. Nearly
60 percent of childhood morbidity was preventable. The
leading causes of adult morbidity were dysentery and
gastrointestinal infections, malaria, parasitic worms, skin
and eye diseases, venereal diseases, rheumatism,
malnutrition, fevers, upper respiratory tract infections,
and tuberculosis. These diseases were endemic and quite
widespread, reflecting the fact that Ethiopians had no
access to modern health care.
Tuberculosis still affected much of the population despite
efforts to immunize as many people as possible. Venereal
diseases, particularly syphilis and gonorrhea, were
prevalent in towns and cities, where prostitution
contributed to the problem. The high prevalence of worms and
other intestinal parasites indicated poor sanitary
facilities and education and the fact that potable water was
available to less than 14 percent of the population.
Tapeworm infection was common because of the popular
practice of eating raw or partially cooked meat.
Schistosomiasis, leprosy, and yellow fever were serious
health hazards in certain regions of the country.
Schistosomiasis, a disease caused by a parasite transmitted
from snails to humans through the medium of water, occurred
mainly in the northern part of the highlands, in the western
lowlands, and in Eritrea and Harerge. Leprosy was common in
Harerge and Gojam and in areas bordering Sudan and Kenya.
The incidence of typhoid, whooping cough, rabies, cholera,
and other diseases had diminished in the 1970s because of
school immunization programs, but serious outbreaks still
plagued many rural areas. Frequent famine made health
conditions even worse.
Smallpox has been stamped out in Ethiopia, the last
outbreak having occurred among the nomadic population in the
late 1970s. Malaria, which is endemic in 70 percent of the
country, was once a scourge in areas below 1,500 meters
elevation. Its threat had declined considerably as a result
of government efforts supported by WHO and AID, but
occasional seasonal outbreaks were common. The most recent
occurrence was in 1989, and the outbreak was largely the
result of heavy rain, unusually high temperatures, and the
settling of peasants in new locations. There was also a
report of a meningitis epidemic in southern and western
Ethiopia in 1989, even though the government had taken
preventive measures by vaccinating 1.6 million people. The
logistics involved in reaching the 70 percent of Ethiopians
who lived more than three days' walk from a health center
with refrigerated vaccines and penicillin prevented the
medical authorities from arresting the epidemic.
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) was a growing
problem in Ethiopia. In 1985 the Ministry of Health reported
the country's first AIDS case. In subsequent years, the
government sponsored numerous AIDS studies and surveys. For
example, in 1988 the country's AIDS Control and Prevention
Office conducted a study in twenty-four towns and discovered
that an average of 17 percent of the people in each town
tested positive for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV),
the precursor of full-blown AIDS. A similar survey in Addis
Ababa showed that 24 percent tested positive.
In 1990 Mengistu Mihret, head of the Surveillance and
Research Coordination Department of the AIDS Control and
Prevention Office, indicated that AIDS was spreading more
rapidly in heavily traveled areas. According to the Ministry
of Health, there were two AIDS patients in the country in
1986, seventeen in 1987, eighty-five in 1988, 188 in 1989,
and 355 as of mid-1990. Despite this dramatic growth rate,
the number of reported AIDS cases in Ethiopia was lower than
in many other African countries. However, the difference
likely reflected the comparatively small amount of resources
being devoted to the study of AIDS.
Starting in 1975, the regime embarked on the formulation of
a new health policy emphasizing disease prevention and
control, rural health services, and promotion of community
involvement and self-reliance in health activities. The
ground for the new policy was broken during the student
zemecha of 1975/76, which introduced peasants to the need
for improved health standards. In 1983 the government drew
up a ten-year health perspective plan that was incorporated
into the ten-year economic development plan launched in
September 1984. The goal of this plan was the provision of
health services to 80 percent of the population by 1993/94.
To achieve such a goal would have required an increase of
over 10 percent in annual budget allocations, which was
unrealistic in view of fiscal constraints.
The regime decentralized health care administration to the
local level in keeping with its objective of community
involvement in health matters. Regional Ministry of Health
offices gave assistance in technical matters, but peasant
associations and kebeles had considerable autonomy in
educating people on health matters and in constructing
health facilities in outlying areas. Starting in 1981, a
hierarchy of community health services, health stations,
health centers, rural hospitals, regional hospitals, and
central referral hospitals were supposed to provide health
care. By the late 1980s, however, these facilities were
available to only a small fraction of the country's
population.
At the bottom of the health-care pyramid was the community
health service, designed to give every 1,000 people access
to a community health agent, someone with three months of
training in environmental sanitation and the treatment of
simple diseases. In addition to the community health agent,
there was a traditional birth attendant, with one month of
training in prenatal and postnatal care and safe delivery
practices. As of 1988, only about a quarter of the
population was being served by a community health agent or a
traditional birth attendant. Both categories were made up of
volunteers chosen by the community and were supported by
health assistants.
Health assistants were full-time Ministry of Health workers
with eighteen months of training, based at health stations
ultimately to be provided at the rate of one health station
per 10,000 population. Each health station was ultimately to
be staffed by three health assistants. Ten health stations
were supervised by one health center, which was designed to
provide services for a 100,000-person segment of the
population. The Regional Health Department supervised health
centers. Rural hospitals with an average of seventy-five
beds and general regional hospitals with 100 to 250 beds
provided referral services for health centers. The six
central referral hospitals were organized to provide care in
all important specialties, train health professionals, and
conduct research. There were a few specialized hospitals for
leprosy and tuberculosis, but overall the lack of funds
meant emphasis on building health centers and health
stations rather than hospitals.
Trained medical personnel were also in short supply. As
noted previously, the ratio of citizens to physicians was
one of the worst in the world. Of 4,000 positions for
nurses, only half were filled, and half of all health
stations were staffed by only one health assistant instead
of the planned three. There were two medical schools--in
Addis Ababa and Gonder--and one school of pharmacy, all
managed by Addis Ababa University. The Gonder medical school
also trained nurses and sanitation and laboratory
technicians. The Ministry of Health ran three nursing
schools and eleven schools for health assistants.
Missionaries also ran two such schools. The regime increased
the number of nurses to 385 and health assistants to 650
annually, but the health budget could not support this many
new graduates. The quality of graduates had also not kept
pace with the quantity of graduates.
Since 1974 there have been modest improvements in national
expenditures on public health. Between 1970 and 1975, the
government spent about 5 percent of its total budget on
health programs. From 1975 to 1978, annual expenditures
varied between 5.5 and 6.6 percent of outlays, and for the
1982-88 period total expenditures on the Ministry of Health
were about 4 percent of total government expenditures. This
was a low figure but comparable to that for other low-income
African countries. Moreover, much of the real increases of 7
to 8 percent in the health budget went to salaries.
A number of countries were generous in helping Ethiopia
meet its health care needs. Cuba, the Soviet Union, and a
number of East European countries provided medical
assistance. In early 1980, nearly 300 Cuban medical
technicians, including more than 100 physicians, supported
local efforts to resolve public health problems. Western aid
for long-term development of Ethiopia's health sector was
modest, averaging about US$10 million annually, the lowest
per capita assistance in sub-Saharan Africa. The main
Western donors included Italy and Sweden. International
organizations, namely UNICEF, WHO, and the United Nations
Population Fund, also extended assistance.
* * *
Much of the literature on Ethiopian society is based on
research concluded before the 1974 revolution. However, an
increasing number of post-1974 works contain useful
information on both the imperial and the revolutionary
periods.
An excellent linguistic study is Language in Ethiopia,
edited by M. Lional Bender et al. John Markakis's Ethiopia:
Anatomy of a Traditional Polity provides a useful assessment
of Ethiopia's prerevolutionary social order with particular
reference to the political ramifications of social
stratification, interethnic relations, and land control.
Donald N. Levine's Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a
Multi-Ethnic Society analyzes the main structural features
of the traditional Amhara, Tigrayan, and Oromo sociocultural
systems. Allan Hoben's Land Tenure among the Amhara of
Ethiopia and Ambaye Zekarias's Land Tenure in Eritrea
(Ethiopia) examine the land tenure system in the Amhara
highlands and in Eritrea, respectively. Taddesse Tamrat's
Church and State in Ethiopia, 1270-1527 and John Spencer
Trimingham's Islam in Ethiopia are useful for an
understanding of the role of religion in Ethiopia.
Richard K. Pankhurst's An Introduction to the Medical
History of Ethiopia provides useful insight into the
evolution of health practices in Ethiopia. Implementing
Educational Policies in Ethiopia by Fassil R. Kiros examines
the revolutionary government's attempts to reform Ethiopia's
education system. Desta Asayehegn's Socio-Economic and
Educational Reforms in Ethiopia, 1942-1974 analyzes the
educational changes made during Haile Selassie's last
thirty-two years on the throne. (For further information and
complete citations, see Bibliography.)
Data as of 1991
|