Health in Namibia

Namibia faces a number of challenges providing health care to its citizens. The country has a dual system of public (serving 85% of the population) and private (15%) health care providers. In the financial year 2006/07, Government and private health expenditure combined accounted for 8.3% of the country's Gross Domestic Product.[1]

Medical infrastructure

Namibia has 343 hospitals and clinics, as well as 1,150 smaller service points.[1]

Health care facilities in the country are sophisticated but not always affordable to the poorer part of the population. Certain services like dialysis and organ transplantations are only available from private medical centres, putting them out of reach for the majority of Namibia's citizens. The situation got wide coverage in 2010 when Jackson Kaujeua, Namibian singer and liberation hero, died from renal failure[2] after not being able to afford private medical care, and thus not being put on dialysis.[3]

The capital Windhoek has cardiac theaters at two different hospitals, the Windhoek Central State Hospital and the Roman Catholic Hospital. Both units were opened in 2010 and 2011, respectively, and have been used to perform open-heart surgery, partly with the assistance of foreign personnel.[4]

Medical personnel

In 2004, the country had 598 physicians - 0.3 per 1,000 inhabitants, and 6,145 midwives and nurses - 3 per 1,000 inhabitants. This number is significantly larger than in the rest of Africa[5] and slightly exceeds the minimum density recommended by the World Health Organisation. The total numbers do not reflect that the private health care facilities are luxuriously staffed while there is a shortage in the public sector.[1]

Health status

Life expectancy

The 2014 CIA estimated average life expectancy in Namibia was 51.85 years.[6]

Specific illnesses

Albinism

There are approximately 1,800 people living with Albinism. They need to make specific lifestyle adaptations because of the extreme weather conditions with about 300 days of sunshine annually. Children are regularly teased at school, and despite outreach activities some parents hide their affected children from society.[7]

Illnesses related to alcohol abuse

Due to high prevalence of alcohol abuse, 8% of adult Namibians suffer from related illnesses. Alcohol consumption is increasing particularly in the north of the country (the four regions of Ohangwena, Omusati, Oshana, and Oshikoto).[8]

Cancer

Due to exposure to sunshine and prevalence of albinism, the most widespread cancer in Namibia is skin cancer, with 581 cases reported in 2010 and 417 cases in 2011. The second most prevalent cancer is Kaposi's sarcoma, a disease related to HIV/AIDS, with 251 reported cases in 2011.[9]

Cholera

There are occasional Cholera outbreaks in the north of the country, particularly in the Kunene Region.[10]

HIV/AIDS

The AIDS epidemic is a tremendous problem in Namibia. Approximately 13% of the adult population is infected with HIV, a rate only surpassed by its eastern neighbor, Botswana.[11] In 2001, there were an estimated 210,000 people living with HIV/AIDS, and the estimated death toll in 2003 was 16,000. The HIV/AIDS epidemic has reduced the number of working-class people and increased the number of orphaned children. It falls to the government to provide education, food, shelter and clothing for these orphans.[12]

Leprosy

There is a small group of approximately 60 leprosy sufferers in the Kavango and Caprivi Region, most of them concentrated at Mashare, east of Rundu. Until the early 1980s this settlement contained a leprosarium of considerable size for thousands of patients from South-West Africa and its neighbours Angola and Botswana.[13]

Malaria

The malaria problem seems to be compounded by the AIDS epidemic. Research has shown that in Namibia the risk of contracting malaria is 14.5% greater if a person is also infected with HIV. The risk of death from malaria is also raised by approximately 50% with a concurrent HIV infection.[14]

Illnesses related to malnutrition

About a third of all children are stunted, which impacts on their overall development and health.[15]

Tuberculosis

Namibia has a high rate of tuberculosis sufferers with approximately 0.7 cases reported per 1,000 inhabitants. Of particular concern are multi and extensively drug-resistant bacteria strains.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Country Health System Fact Sheet". World Health Organisation. 2010.
  2. Ekongo, John (2010-05-31). "Hamba kahle, Jackson Kaujeua". New Era.
  3. Isaacs, Denver (16 February 2010). "False rumours about Kaujeua". The Namibian.
  4. Smith, Jana-Mari (5 April 2011). "RC Hospital makes history". The Namibian.
  5. "Country Health System Fact Sheet". World Health Organisation. 2006.
  6. "CIA - The World Factbook Life Expectancy". Cia.gov. Retrieved 2014-06-24.
  7. "Eva Ndatipo comfortable in her own skin". New Era. 30 October 2015.
  8. Xoagub, Francis (4 August 2011). "Alcohol abuse up". New Era.
  9. Kapitako, Alvine (7 February 2013). "Skin cancer rife in Namibia". New Era.
  10. Tjihenuna, Theresia (10 January 2014). "Cholera death toll rises to eight". The Namibian.
  11. "HIV/AIDS in Namibia". University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  12. AIDSinAfrica.net Web Publication (2007), Retrieved May 20, 2007. From Aidsinafrica.net
  13. Smith, Jana-Mari (1 April 2011). "Leprosy: the reality in Namibia". The Namibian. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  14. Korenromp, E.L., Williams, B.G., de Vlas, S.J., Gouws, E., Gilks, C.F., Ghys, P.D., Nahlen, B.L. (2005). Malaria Attributable to the HIV-1 Epidemic, Sub-Saharan Africa. Emerging Infectious Diseases, 11, 9, 1410–1419.
  15. Tjihenuna, Theresia (2 April 2014). "More than 1 million Namibians defecate in open". The Namibian.
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