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Zanmi Lasante site background
The island nation of Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere
and one of the poorest in the world. Nationwide, Haiti’s per capita
income falls well below a dollar day, at about $240 annually. Two-thirds
of all Haitians are unemployed or underemployed, and approximately the same
proportion depend on subsistence farming for survival.
Reflecting
the country's grim economic statistics, the health of the Haitian people also
ranks as the worst in the hemisphere. Haiti has the worst malnutrition, the highest
rates of infant and maternal mortality, and the worst AIDS epidemic in the Americas.
Nearly half the population is chronically undernourished. Healthy life expectancy
at birth is only 43 years. Of every thousand children born in Haiti, 139 die
before reaching the age of 5, in stark contrast with nearby Cuba where the rate
is only 7.5 deaths for every 1,000 live births. The leading causes of child mortality
are diarrheal diseases, acute respiratory infections, and malnutrition. Acute
respiratory infections and diarrheas cause half of the deaths in children under
five years of age. Only half of the child population is vaccinated. Infectious
diseases, led by HIV and TB, are the major causes of adult mortality. Maternal
mortality, largely due to obstructed labor and hemorrhage, is at 523 per 100,000
live births, compared to less than 20 per 100,000 in the United States and only
2 per 100,000 in Sweden.
The
eighty percent of the Haitian population who live in abject poverty and bear
the brunt of the burden of disease have little access to health care, especially
in rural areas. The 2005 World Health Report estimates that the Haitian government
spends only $2 per capita on health each year, accounting for about 40 percent
of national expenditures on health. Since health insurance is not available or
affordable for the vast majority of Haitians, households must pay for health
care or go without. Almost three quarters of private sector spending on health
care takes the form of out-of-pocket expenditures.
The country is divided into nine departments and 133 municipalities. On
paper, the Ministry of Health in Haiti (MSPP) is structured at the central
and departmental levels, with a hospital in each department and a health
center in every municipality. Because the health budget is low, this structure
is not functional, and most of the “departmental” hospitals
are run by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).
The already dire public health situation has been exacerbated in recent
years by a U.S.-backed embargo against the elected government of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide and then by the coup that drove him from office.
The public health system, which President Aristide had tried to strengthen,
was further crippled when the U.S. vetoed disbursement of $146 million in
loans that had already been approved by the Inter-American Development
Bank. What little health aid the U.S. and the European Union did provide to
Haiti after Aristide was elected in 2000 went only to NGOs.
Dismal health outcomes are especially pronounced in the country’s
rural interior, where deforestation, erosion, and lack of infrastructure
have crippled the agricultural economy. This region is home to only ten
percent of the population, but they are the poorest people in Haiti. This
is the area in which ZL works.
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