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Country Health Profile.
Data updated for 2001Colombia Health Situation Analysis and Trends Summary Country Chapter Summary from Health in the Americas, 1998.
COLOMBIAGENERAL SITUATION AND TRENDSSocioeconomic, Political, and Demographic Overview Colombia has a land area of 1,141,748 km2; its relief map is dominated by three branches of the Andean range (western, central, and eastern) separated by valleys and plains. The population in 1997 was estimated at 40,072,328 inhabitants (71% urban). Internal migration flows mainly toward the Andean region. One of every four Colombians lives outside his or her native region. External migration is primarily to Ecuador, the United States of America, and Venezuela. According to the 1993 census, emigration exceeded half a million persons. However, this number represents only part of the exodus, because much of the migration is done clandestinely. Colombia is a multiethnic and multicultural country, with diverse traditions and different languages. There are 81 indigenous groups (1.7% of all inhabitants) as well as a sizable population of African ancestry (25%) and of mixed race. This diversity produces not only cultural differences but also wide variations in living conditions and hence different types of diseases. In general, the demographic indicators show steady improvement from 19701975 to 19901995. However, the statistics for the country as a whole obscure large differences among regions, between urban and rural areas, and among social levels. There were also differences between the urban and rural populations: in the former, the overall fertility rate was 2.65 children per woman, whereas in the latter it was 4.41 children per woman. Mortality from communicable diseases was three times greater for the population with an index of unmet basic needs between 90 and 100 than for those with an index lower than 20%. The improvement of living conditions for the general population in the municipal seats (urban areas) has apparently had a positive influence on the demographic indicators. However, despite the encouraging trend observed between 1973 and 1993, the poverty gap between the municipal seats and the rest of the municipalities actually widened. In 1973 the number of people living in poverty (i.e., with at least one unmet basic needs indicator) was 1.5% higher in the municipalities as a whole (excluding inhabitants of municipal seats) than in the municipal seats. By 1993 that number had nearly doubled to 2.9%. The ratio of the population living in abject poverty (presence of two or more unmet basic needs indicators) in rural areas relative to those in the municipal seats increased from 2.2 to 5.0. In the past 30 years the Colombian Government has taken great interest in extending the coverage of primary and secondary education, but the countrys education deficits are still immense. In 1994, 2 of every 10 children between the ages of 6 and 11 were not attending primary school, and 5 of every 10 youths 12 to 17 years of age were not in secondary school. Of every 100 children enrolled in primary school, only 30 completed the ninth grade and only 7 managed to reach that level without having to repeat a year. In urban as well as rural areas, poor people receive the least education. In 1973, illiteracy in rural areas (22.8%) was more than three times higher than in urban areas (6.0%); variations within the country ranged from 3.0% in Bogotá to 25.11% in Tolima to 25.3% in Córdoba. As for number of years of schooling, in the urban population the figure (7 years) was double that in the rural population (3.2 years). In addition to the deficits in educational coverage, there are also problems with the quality of education, especially in the public primary and secondary schools. In rural primary schools the children cover less than half the material prescribed in the curriculum; 25% of secondary school children in seventh grade rank at the lowest level in the language tests, and fewer than 20% in grades seven through nine manage to achieve the highest level. Public expenditure on education as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) has remained almost unchanged: 2.85 % in the 1970s, 2.99% in the 1980s, and 3.03% in the 1990s. As for the allocation of this spending, in 1994 the proportion allocated for primary schools was 33%; secondary schools, 29%; and higher education, 17%. Coverage for basic services in the home increased significantly between 1985 and 1993, from 70.5% to 82.1% for water supply and from 59.4% to 69.0% for sewerage connections. Nevertheless, there are still between 6 and 10 million people who lack one or the other of these services. The situation is more critical in rural areas, where between 5 and 8 million people lack at least one of these services. The gaps are even greater when it comes to water quality. Only 62% of the urban population receives water that is fit for human consumption, and in rural areas the proportion is only 10%. The most significant advances in water supply and sewerage services have taken place in the 1990s. Investments made between 1991 and 1994 came to 25% of total spending in this area in the past 30 years; although this expenditure represented only 0.3% of GDP. The Colombian economy has experienced enormous changes in recent decades, constantly growing and diversifying. In the early 1990s it began to open up dramatically, with protectionist customs barriers falling in almost all sectors. However, in the past six years the economys performance has been uneven and some sectors have benefited more than others. The GDP grew steadily from 1991 (2%) until 1994 (5.6%), but then it dropped to 4.5% in 1996. Inflation continued to decline until it reached 19% in 1995, but then it reversed and reached 23 % in 1996. Direct foreign investments went from US$ 2,100 million in 1985 to US$ 7,342 million in 1995, not including the mining and petroleum sectors. The foreign debt rose from US$ 17,000 million in 1992 to US$ 20,000 million in 1994, which corresponds to 34.5% and 30.7%, respectively, of the GDP. As a result of these trends, the situation in the urban labor market deteriorated seriously and rapidly. In September 1996 the unemployment rate reached 12.1%, its highest level in 10 years. The situation was similar in almost all the large cities in Colombia: Pasto, 15.5%; Cali, 15.1%; Medellín, 13.6%; Manizales, 13.1%; Barranquilla, 12.2%; Bucaramanga, 10.8%; Bogotá, 10.4%. According to a 1994 report by the National Administrative Department of Statistics, informal employment represented 55% of total employment and had not changed since 1984. Contrary to the unfavorable situation with regard to jobs, average earnings of those who are employed have increased in real terms since 1991, especially in the financial sector, while the wages of people working in the industrial and commercial sectors have remained within the national average, which indicates that although employment declined the productivity of workers improved. The Governments budget for social spending increased from 9.07% of GDP in 1990 to 15.14% in 1995. The crude general mortality rate during 19901995 was 6.57 deaths per 1,000 inhabitants. Underreporting of deaths in municipal seats was estimated at 15%, compared with 65% in the rest of the municipalities. Underreporting in the population as a whole was 34.0%, with rates of 46.6% for infants under 1 year old and 29.8% in the population aged 70 and over. In 1994, circulatory diseases were the leading cause of deaths (168,568), followed by external causes, tumors, communicable diseases, and certain conditions that originated in the perinatal period. In terms of age distribution, 79.5 % of deaths due to diseases of the circulatory system were in the population aged 45 and over, whereas 71% of mortality due to external causes was in the group 15 to 44 years of age, and communicable diseases occurred mostly in children under five years of age. Among women, 35.3% of all deaths were due to diseases of the circulatory system and 17.7% of deaths were due to tumors. Among males, however, 36.8% of all deaths were due to external causes. SPECIFIC HEALTH PROBLEMS Analysis by Population Group The main health problems in childhood are infectious diseases. In infants under 1 year of age, 43.5% of all deaths in 1994 were attributable to conditions that originated in the perinatal period, and 61.9% of the deaths in that age group were due to hypoxia. Thus the main cause of death is related to care during and shortly after birth. In children under 5 years old, acute respiratory infections and diarrheal diseases are the leading reasons for consulting a health professional. In 1995, these reasons accounted for 37.4% and 14.0%, respectively, of all consultations. In addition to the specific health problems of children, there are other problems in Colombia that have not yet been quantified, such as orphanhood as a result of armed conflicts, participation of children in those conflicts, and child labor. Sexual activity begins between the ages of 11 and 18, and it is more common at younger ages among the population in the lower social strata in large cities. As a result, more than 10% of girls between the ages of 15 and 19 are already mothers. In 1994, 19,250 youths in Colombia between the ages of 12 and 17 had been sentenced and were incarcerated in correctional institutions. Recidivism in this group is nearly 85%. The use of psychoactive substances is widespread among adolescents under the age of 18 in the upper and middle social strata; youths under 18 account for 15.2% of the population that consumes alcohol, and 6.8% of all cigarette smokers are young. Cocaine is used by 3.8% of the general population; 15.2% of the users are between 11 and 15 years old and 30.4 % are between 16 and 18 years old. These factors contribute to the fact that external causes, especially homicides and traffic accidents, constitute the principal cause of death among adolescents. The main problems in the adult population are unemployment and underemployment, which create and reinforce precarious living conditions and hence exposure to social and environmental factors that affect health. Rural poverty, among other factors, has been a factor in the displacement of large population groups to the outskirts of large cities. In addition to the foregoing problems, 12.6% of the population over the age of 15 has high blood pressure, and an estimated 7% of the population over the age 30 has non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, 30% and 40% of whom are unaware that they are ill. Second to traumatic injuries, the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in this age group is chronic degenerative diseases, and among women there is a high rate of illnesses associated with reproductive health. In studies conducted before 1993, it was found that 87.5% of the elderly were not beneficiaries of social security; 42.0 % did not have a formal, regular income; 41.93% were living in a state of abject poverty in marginal areas; 11.0% were living in slums; 32.5% were illiterate; 8.7% had the benefit of some form of pension; 30.85% were engaged in remunerative work; and 39.05% worked at various trades in order to subsist. This age group accounted for about 50% of all deaths in Colombia, and cardiovascular disease caused about half of those deaths. In 1995, institutional coverage of pregnant women was 80%, each with an average of four checkups, 30% of which took place in the first trimester. In that same year, the coverage rate for institutional delivery was 77%, which means that about one-fifth of pregnant women did not receive any type of medical care. This situation was reflected in the coverage attained by health care programs for women of reproductive age. Of all women of reproductive age, only 55% were married. Only 72% of the women who were married or living in established unions used contraceptives; 29.4% of them were supplied by the public sector. Of all pregnancies, 24% were terminated by abortion and 26% resulted in unwanted births. Abortion is the second leading cause of maternal death, accounting for 15% of all deaths associated with maternity, with the highest incidence in women from 20 to 29 years of age. This situation coincides with the unmet demand for contraceptives in the at-risk population. Of all pregnancies that ended in abortion in 1995, 24% were due to contraceptive failures and the rest were due to lack of access to contraceptives. Because abortion is illegal in Colombia, many women use unsanitary procedures to terminate unwanted pregnancies, a practice that greatly endangers their life and health. Analysis by Type of Disease Communicable Diseases The number one health problem in the Colombian population is injury due to external causes, mainly related to violence, which affects all of society. In 1994 the National Institute of Legal and Forensic Medicine created the National Reference Center on Violence under the directorate of Forensic Services to support social outreach activities for individuals and groups. The Center is responsible for planning and executing interventions against violence. In 1995 there were a total of 213,341 investigations of nonfatal injuries and 11,970 reports of sexual offenses in Colombia. These figures represent a 15% increase in the rate of nonfatal injuries (527 per 100,000 inhabitants in 1994 and 608 in 1995) and a 7.6% increase in the rate of sexual offenses (31.6 per 100,000 inhabitants in 1994 and 34.0 in 1995). The rate of nonfatal injuries in 1995, compared with the previous year, reflects increases in public violence, family violence, sexual offenses, and traffic as well as other accidents. Of nonfatal injuries, 163,230 (76.5% of all injuries) were personal injuries intentionally inflicted by others; 65.8 % came under the heading of public violence (quarrels, holdups, settling of accounts, revenge, social purges, etc.). Most of the injuries were inflicted with blunt instruments (63.7%), followed by stabbing (18.5%). In 1995 the Institute reported 42,963 cases of family violence (child abuse, conjugal violence, and aggression among other family members), which represents 20.1% of all personal injuries investigated and is equivalent to a national rate of 122 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. The groups that suffered the highest rates of family violence were females 25 to 34 years of age and males 5 to 14 years old. Santa Fe de Bogotá, San Andrés, Arauca, Meta, Risaralda, Quindío, and Tolima had the highest rates of all forms of family abuse. In 1995 there were 11,970 reports of sexual offenses, 87.8% of which were perpetrated against women, for a rate of 34 per 100,000 inhabitants; 55.3% of the victims were from 5 to 14 years of age, and in 77.4% of the cases the aggressor was a person known to the victim (9% were the father, 8.5% the stepfather, 11.3% another family member, and 48.6% an acquaintance). In 35.5% of the victims under 14 years of age, physical examination provided positive evidence. Fatal and nonfatal injuries from traffic accidents have increased in the large cities. In 1995 a total of 7,874 autopsies were performed on persons who died in traffic accidents, which corresponds to a rate of 22 per 100,000 inhabitants. For every person who died, seven persons were injured in traffic accidents. Examinations were performed on a total of 52,527 victims of nonfatal injuries incurred in traffic accidents, or 150 per 100,000 inhabitants. Males, especially those between 25 and 34 years of age, were at greatest risk for nonfatal injuries (in which the pedestrian is usually the principal victim), whereas mortal injuries were most common in the population aged 60 and over. It is estimated that in 1995 there were a total of 1,450,845 years of potential life lost (YPLL) because of violent deaths, 67.4% (977,725) of which were due to homicide, 18.5 % (268,303) to traffic accidents, 10.1% (145,988) to other accidents, and 4.1% (58,830) to suicide. Of all mortal injuries due to external causes, 65.7% were homicides, followed by traffic accidents, which represented 20.5%. An analysis of the data by age and sex revealed especially significant differences between the sexes. The ratio for violent deaths in general is 7.7 males for every female; by type of violence, the figures are 14:1 for homicide, 3.3:1 for suicide, and 3.9:1 for each type of accident. In terms of age, 59.7% (22,977) of the violent deaths were in young persons 15 to 34 years old. In this age group the sex ratio (male/female) was 10:1 for violent deaths in general and 15.3:1 for homicide. Homicides were the leading cause of death for young Colombian males as well as the number-one cause of mortality and YPLL (67.4% of the total). In 1938 the homicide rate was 15 per 100,000 inhabitants; in the 1950s, despite the violence that marked this period, the rate was 55 per 100,000; in 1991 it reached 88 per 100,000; in 1994, 78 per 100,000; and in 1995, 72 per 100,000. An analysis of the scenarios and forms in which violence has occurred since the 1970s shows a picture of social disorder resulting from premeditated acts of revenge, the settling of accounts between drug trafficking leaders, terrorist plots, ordinary delinquency, confrontations over land rights, exploitation of emeralds, and other alarming manifestations of everyday violence. This situation has displaced many Colombians who have been obliged to move away from their places of origin to protect their lives. Displacement, or involuntary migration because of violence, has caused grave consequences for individuals and families who are not directly involved in the conflicts but whose physical safety has been threatened. These groups are scattered throughout the country. Peasants have been uprooted because of common justice or private justice, and those living in abject poverty have been displaced because their situation becomes even more difficult in conflict-torn areas. It is estimated that guerrillas are responsible for 26% of the displacement; paramilitary forces, 32%; peoples militias, 16%; regular armed forces, 16%; and others, 10%. Displacement is accomplished mainly by threats (49%), followed by killings (15%), holdups (8%), and other methods (28%). An investigation of the period 19851994 by the Episcopal Conference revealed that 1 of every 60 Colombians was forced to migrate because of violence. It was found that 586,261 persons, comprising 108,301 households, were displaced. Of these households, 6.7% had lost a spouse or one of the children through violence before they migrated, and 1,570 orphans, abandoned children, or youth had to assume responsibility for the family. Of this population, 52.4% were living in tenements or in slumsin other words, they were concentrated in outlying urban areas under living conditions that did not compare with the way they had lived in their places of origin. For example, 69.3% had their own homes before they were displaced, and this percentage dropped to 28.7% after displacement. Before, 40.7% were involved in agricultural production, either earning wages or as owners of small or medium-sized plots of land, and 10.0% had small or medium-sized businesses; after displacement, 22.5% had become street vendors, 12.9% had become laborers, and only 10.7 % continued to be engaged in agricultural activities. According to information from humanitarian organizations, during the period December 19951996, 53% of the displaced population were women and 54% were under 18 years of age. Women heads of families represented 36% of the total displaced population during this period. Access to health services is another serious problem that follows in the wake of forced migration: only 22.1% of the displaced households receive medical care. Since 1990 some 180,000 cases of malaria have been reported each year, and the numbers are rising. The cases are typically found in clearly established urban foci such as Buenaventura and Barranquilla. Of the total, 38% have been attributed to Plasmodium falciparum. At the end of 1996, La Guajira, where Plasmodium vivax traditionally had predominated, had an increase in cases among males (20% of them Wayuú Indians), 80% of which were attributable to P. falciparum. Two cases of yellow fever were reported in 1994 (in the Meta and Vichada areas); in 1995 there were three cases (in Meta and Guaviare); and in 1996 there were eight cases, all in males (Meta, Amazonia, and Caquetá). Dengue affects all age groups, especially those aged 15 to 44. Hemorrhagic dengue and dengue shock syndrome have been diagnosed since 1989, and the number of reported cases has steadily increased, as the following figures show: 302 in 1993, 508 in 1994, 1,028 in 1995, 1,757 in 1996, and 1,702 as of week 25 of 1997. To date, however, serotype D3 has not been isolated. The areas most affected have been Santander, Tolima, Valle, Norte de Santander, Meta, and Huila. In 1995 the Atlantic coast had the heaviest rainfall in years, which brought with it an increase in the population of Aedes taeniorhynchus and Psorophora confinnis mosquitoes, vectors that have been implicated in the equine encephalitis outbreak in Venezuela that affected around 75,000 inhabitants in the municipalities of Riohacha, Maicao, Uribia, and Manaure in the La Guajira district; a high percentage of the Wayuú population were infected. Although the recent increase in the incidence of these diseases can be explained in part by changes in weather that have provided favorable conditions for the vectors to reproduce, it is also related to decentralization and the decline in vector control programs within the framework of health sector reform. Among children under 5 years old there was a decline in diseases preventable by immunization in the period 19901994, as illustrated by the fact that there have been no cases of poliomyelitis since 1991. Vaccination coverage in 1995 was 92%, and the number of reporting units increased from 868 in 1993 to 1,930 in 1996. In 1991 a total of 11,127 cases of measles were reported; in 1994 the figure had fallen to 1,816, of which only 254 were confirmed in the laboratory; and in 1996 there were 1,070 cases, of which only 4 were confirmed. In 1993 Colombia made the commitment to eliminate measles, and in 1995 it introduced the use of trivalent viral vaccine. Coverage has consistently exceeded 90% during these years. The Plan for the Elimination of Neonatal Tetanus, implemented in 1989, succeeded in reducing cases by 85% (from 171 in 1989 to 26 in 1996). The localization strategy was initiated in 1994, and 150 municipalities were identified as being either at risk or in the attack phasemost of them in rural areas where access was difficult or in urban locations with a sizable marginal population. Between 1993 and 1995, coverage in these areas ranged from 29% (in small municipalities with fewer than 1,000 births a year) to 75% (in cities with more than 3,000 births a year). There have been outbreaks as well as isolated cases of cholera associated with precarious living conditions in the population living on the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts and in the areas bordering on the two large rivers that traverse the country from south to north, the Magdalena and the Cauca. In 1995 a total of 1,989 cases were reported, and in 1996 there were 4,428. Most of the cases were on the Atlantic Coast, and the Wayuú people were most affected (31% of the cases). Tuberculosis, which has been on the increase since 1993, reached a rate of 28 per 100,000 inhabitants in 1995. Extrapulmonary forms represented 10.1% of the total, and the districts of La Guajira, Atlántico, Quindío, Arauca, Vichada, Putumayo, Amazonas, Vaupés, and Guaviare, with rates in excess of 50 per 1,000, are considered to be at very high risk. In most of these districts a large proportion of the population is indigenous. Human rabies declined during 19921994 (with seven, five, and three cases, respectively, in those years). In 1995, however, there were eight cases. Up until that year the cases had been transmitted by dogs, but the three cases that occurred in 1996 were transmitted by hematophagous bats. Since 1994, the cases have occurred exclusively in rural areas of the country. The program for the prevention and control of AIDS and STDs reported 933 cases of AIDS in 1992 and 1,042 in 1996, with a cumulative total of 7,776 diagnosed cases and a cumulative mortality of 41.5% (3,226 cases). Of all the cases diagnosed, 85% were in men, and 40.5% of those were in the group aged 25 to 34. Only 2.1% of the cases affected the population under 15 years of age. Heterosexual transmission accounted for 44.0% of the cases and homosexual transmission for 27.4%. There was an increase in diagnosis of congenital syphilis, from 322 cases in 1990 to 406 in 1995, under the Syphilis Surveillance and Control Program launched by the Ministry of Health. However, the monitoring of STDs in prostitutes was suspended, even though it had produced a 51.6% decline in diagnoses of gonococcal infections, from 39,089 cases in 1990 to 18,915 in 1995. In contrast, diagnoses of genital herpes increased 99.3% during this same period, from 2,231 to 4,446 cases. The prevalence of the surface antigen for hepatitis B (HBsAg) in blood banks remained stabilized, with levels of 0.73% in 1992, 0.87% in 1993, and 0.87% in 1994. Studies conducted in the past decade showed an overall prevalence of HBsAg carriers of around 5%, with transmission occurring within the household and primarily in the indigenous population. A plan for the control of hepatitis B was implemented in 1993, which involved vaccinating both the population under 5 years of age in the endemic areas and health workers. Since 1994, hepatitis B vaccine has been included in the regular vaccination scheme for all infants under 1 year old throughout the country; hence coverage for this age group went from 36% in 1994 to 73% in 1995 and to 94% in 1996. Noncommunicable Diseases and Other Health-Related Problems Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in women, the second leading cause in men, and the primary cause of death in the group aged 45 to 64. In 1994, 44% of deaths attributed to this cause were due to ischemic heart disease, 93% of them were in persons aged 45 and older, and 56% were in men. Cerebrovascular diseases represented 28% of deaths from cardiovascular conditions, 91% of which occurred in the over-45 age group and 54% in women. Arterial hypertension is the most important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. According to the 1987 national health study, the prevalence of arterial hypertension in Colombia as a whole was 11.6% in the population over 15 years of age. However, a study conducted in 1995 in the population of Quibdó revealed a prevalence of 35% in all persons over the age of 18 and a prevalence of 39% in the Colombian population of African ancestrypercentages significantly higher than those observed in the rest of the population (21%). The prevalence rates varied by age, from 10% in young persons to 50% in those aged 49 and over. No differences were noted according to sex. Malignant tumors are the second leading cause of death in the group aged 45 and over and in women. In 1994, stomach cancer was the most frequent form both in men (20.5% of all cases) and women (14.0%). The second most common site for men was the lung (13.4%), followed by the prostate (12.1%), and the lymphatic and hematic system (10.3%); for women cancer of the uterine cervix was the second most common site (11.1%), followed by the breast (9.9%) and lung (7.0%). According to the records for 19891993 maintained by the National Institute of Cancerology (INC), which is the national reference center, about 70% of the diagnoses were made in the advanced stagesnamely, stages III and IV. In the case of cancer of the uterine cervix, 80.9% of the cases were in stages higher than IIa, and with breast cancer 80.6% of the cases were in stages III and IV. The Survey of Health Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices conducted in 1994 showed that 33% of the adult Colombian population had smoked at some time and 21.4% were current smokers (29% of males and 14% of females). Of the current smokers, 84% smoked an average of 8.5 cigarettes a day on a daily basis. Tobacco use increases with age up to age 40, when it begins to decline. Males began to smoke at 17.3 years of age, and females at 18.2 years. Of the adolescents surveyed (1217 years old), 19% had smoked at some time, and 13% were currently smoking an average of 3.1 cigarettes a day on a daily basis. In the group under 5 years of age, the decline in overall malnutrition went from 10.1% in 1986 to 8.4% in 1995. The Pacific Coast region was most affected, with overall malnutrition at 17%. Chronic malnutrition declined from 16.6 % to 15.0% during the same period; it is higher in rural areas than in cities (19% and 13%, respectively). The decline mentioned may be due to, among other factors, the campaign to encourage breast-feeding. The National Population and Health Survey found that 95% of all children under 5 years old had been breast-fed for an average of 14 months. Despite this high percentage, however, exclusive breast-feeding through the fourth month of life is less than 10%. RESPONSE OF THE HEALTH SYSTEM National Health Plans and Policies The 1980s saw the beginning of an active process of institutional transformation. Law 10 on the municipalization of health, drafted by the health sector, gave impetus to a series of changes aimed at strengthening the sectors territorial entities. Taking this initiative into account, the new Constitution of 1991 set out the fundamental points that gave rise to reform of the social security system. This mandate was enacted gradually under Law 60, which governs matters relating to the authority and resources of the various territorial entities, and it culminated in the enactment of Law 100 of 1993, which created the social security system in general. This mandate covers standards governing the general system of pensions, professional risks, complementary social services, and the social security system as it relates to health. The essence of the reform of the system is provision of coverage to persons under both contributory and subsidized regimens based on a partnership scheme of income redistribution that ensures universal benefits through protection of the insured, the spouse, and minor children as well as parents and other relatives. The important role of promotion and prevention in the new system, the significant increase in the Governments financial contributions to health, the greater spending efficiency gained from competitive arrangements, the strong participation of upper-income groups, and the solidarity inherent in the system are all factors that are expected to contribute to major progress in health. With regard to the degree of decentralization of health services, 17 departments and 4 districts have been decentralized and are directly managing more than US$ 474 billion, which represents 70% of the national allocation, and 104 municipalities have been certified to independently manage their own fiscal budgets. The sum of US$ 2,567 million has been allocated for 26 hospitals, health centers, and jobs in the health sector to improve care for the rural population. Health sector reform currently faces a major problem with regard to access of the population, especially the very poor and the unemployed, to health services. One of the benefit plans proposed under the reform is the compulsory health plan POS-S, which is basically designed to respond to the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable members of the population. POS-S contains initiatives to benefit the individual, the family, and the community in general. Six of these initiatives are included under the basic plan and one is a form of reinsurance against high-cost diseases. Organization of the Health Sector Institutional Organization The new general social security system for health is based on four fundamental forms of support: The National Council on Social Security for Health, under the Ministry of Health, is a professional group that is responsible for standardizing, regulating, controlling, and directing the system. The Ministry of Health relies on the sectional health services (one per department) to carry out its duties at the territorial level. The National Solidarity and Guaranty Fund is responsible for financing the system. All persons with incomes higher than the equivalent of two minimum wages are required to support the system with contributions, while the poor, the unemployed, and peasants are subsidized. The health promotion enterprises are the fundamental organizational nuclei of the system. They are responsible for the basic mobilization of financial resources, health promotion, and organization and delivery of medical services. These entities also have the related responsibility of managing the disabled and providing health services in the event of work-related accidents and occupational diseases as well as organizing complementary health plans, which may be public, private, partnership-based, or mixed and that compete for subscribers in the population. The institutions that provide health servicesthe hospitals, outpatient consultation offices, laboratories, basic health care centers, and other health service centers, plus all the professionals who, either individually or in groups, offer their services through the health promotion enterprises. Law 100 reaffirms the administrative, technical, and financial autonomy of the public hospitals originally established in Law 10 of 1990 and Law 60 of 1993, and for this purpose it stipulates that public hospitals will be turned into social enterprises of the State as a special type of decentralized public entity; that staff will be governed by the provisions of Law 10, and that private law shall apply in contractual matters. As of June 1997, 104 of the 142 secondary- and tertiary-level hospitals had been turned into social enterprises of the State, and there were 165 health partnership enterprises, 67 family compensation funds, and 30 health promotion enterprises. Law 100 also specifies that, as part of the Compulsory Health Plan, initiatives executed by the local government to promote health and prevent disease must be provided free to the entire community and should respond to the needs expressed by the people. All the systems subscribers have the right to be covered under a basic plan, which includes emergency care, hospitalization, consultations, and medication. The public health service network consists of 3,340 jobs in the health sector, 904 health centers, 128 health centers with beds, and 555 hospitals397 hospitals at the primary level, 126 at the secondary level, and 32 at the tertiary level. In addition, the private sector has 340 clinics. Under the health insurance system, the 10 public health promotion enterprises, together with the 20 authorized private and mixed enterprises, have the capacity to handle a total of 21.6 million persons. As of December 1996 a total of 13.9 million Colombians were covered, of which 66.9% (9.3 million people), according to the latest official report dated June 1996, were subscribers under the Social Security Institute, and the remaining 33.1% came under other health promotion enterprises. The subsidized program currently involves 236 entities: 18 health promotion enterprises, 49 family compensation funds, and 169 health partnerships, which as of December 1996 had 5.9 million subscribers. Of this total, 33.1% belonged to the health partnerships, 53.2% to the health promotion enterprises, and 13.7% to the family compensation funds.
Health promotion activities come under the Basic Health Care Plan and are essentially carried out at the municipal level. Within this framework, the goal of the Plan for Environment and Sanitation for 1998 is to achieve 90% coverage with water supply systems and 77% coverage with sewerage systems, |




