Honduras Health
Rural dental clinic in Los Encinitos
Courtesy Bryan Fung (top) and Lynn Meltzer (bottom)
In Honduras the quality of and access to health care
are
directly tied to income levels. Adequate health care is
available
to those able to pay the high cost. Health care for the
urban and
rural poor is extremely limited. The lack of health care
for the
majority of the population is starkly apparent in its poor
health.
Widespread malnutrition is responsible for 34 percent of
children
experiencing stunting when they are between two and five
years of
age. In addition, most of the population lacks access to
running
water and sanitation facilities--all key contributing
factors to
the country's high infant mortality rate (63 per 1,000
live births)
and to a relatively low life expectancy rate (64.9 years)
in 1992.
Health services are not readily accessible to a
majority of the
population. An estimated 1.3 million Hondurans were
without access
to health care in 1990. In the isolated regions of
Honduras, there
are almost no physicians. The ratio of doctor to
population in 1984
was one to 1,510. Government clinics often are empty
shells lacking
adequate personnel, equipment, and medicines.
Infectious and parasitic diseases are the leading
causes of
death. Gastroenteritis and tuberculosis are serious
problems.
Diseases such as influenza, malaria, typhoid, and
pneumonia, once
believed to be under control, have returned in force
because of a
lack of preventive measures. The foreign-exchange crisis
of the
1980s has resulted in periods when vaccines and other
preventive
medicines were not available. Alcoholism and drug
addiction are
other health concerns mentioned by the Ministry of Health.
The
rapid spread of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
is also
of great concern to Honduran health authorities. The
incidence of
AIDS appears to be particularly high in San Pedro Sula.
The cholera epidemic that originated in Peru hit
Honduras in
late 1991. Because of poor sanitation conditions, health
officials
were frightened that the disease would quickly spread
throughout
the country. The government launched an educational
campaign months
before the first case was reported, stressing personal
hygiene as
a prophylaxis against cholera. By the middle of 1992,
however, more
than 100 people had been diagnosed as having cholera.
Although the country's national public health system
was created
in 1959, the date when the Honduran Social Security
Institute
(Instituto Hondureño del Seguro Social--IHSS) began to
operate, the
proliferation of health services to all regions of the
country has
been painfully slow. For years, people have had to travel
to
Tegucigalpa to avail themselves of public health service.
During
the 1970s, when the government made an effort to expand
health
services, the INSS opened a medical center in San Pedro
Sula.
However, in El Progreso, only fifty kilometers away and
the third
largest city in the country, IHSS services were not
available until
1992. Population growth, the implementation of economic
austerity
measures by the government in the 1990s, and the present
lack of
facilities seem to suggest that public health services in
Honduras
are likely to remain inadequate in the near future.
Data as of December 1993
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