Country Health Profile.

Data updated for 2001


Suriname



 Last Available
A.1.0.0-Population
A.1.1.0-Population (Male)
A.1.2.0-Population (Female)
A.2.3.0-Proportion of urban population (Urban)
A.7.2.0-Total fertility rate (Female)
A.12.0.0-Life expectancy at birth
A.12.1.0-Life expectancy at birth (Male)
A.12.2.0-Life expectancy at birth (Female)



 Last Available
B.2.0.0-Literacy rate
B.2.1.0-Literacy rate (Male)
B.2.2.0-Literacy rate (Female)
B.5.0.0-Gross National Product (GNP), per capita, international $ (PPP-adjusted)
B.7.0.0-Annual GDP growth rate
B.8.0.0-Highest 20% - Lowest 20% income ratio
B.9.0.0-Proportion of population below the international poverty line



 Last Available
C.1.0.1-Infant mortality rate, reported (less than 1 year)
C.4.0.9-Under-5 mortality rate, estimated (less than 5 years)
C.5.2.0-Maternal mortality rate, reported (Female)
C.10.0.9-Proportion of under-5 registered deaths due to intestinal infectious diseases (acute diarrheal diseases (ADD)) (less than 5 years)
C.11.0.9-Proportion of under-5 registered deaths due to acute respiratory infections (ARI) (less than 5 years)
8
C.15.0.0-Mortality rate from communicable diseases, estimated
C.19.0.0-Mortality rate from diseases of the circulatory system, estimated
C.23.0.0-Mortality rate from neoplasms, all types, estimated
C.31.0.0-Mortality rate from external causes, estimated



 Last Available
D.1.0.0-Low birth weight incidence
D.6.0.0-Number of confirmed cases of measles
-
D.17.0.0-Malaria annual parasitic incidence
D.18.0.0-Number of registered cases of tuberculosis
D.21.0.0-Number of registered cases of AIDS
-



 Last Available
E.1.0.0-Proportion of population with access to drinking water services
E.6.0.1-Proportion of under-1 population vaccinated against poliomyelitis (less than 1 year)
E.7.0.0-Proportion of under-1 population vaccinated against measles
E.8.0.1-Proportion of under-1 population vaccinated against diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus (less than 1 year)
E.9.0.1-Proportion of under-1 population vaccinated against tuberculosis (less than 1 year)
E.13.2.0-Proportion of deliveries attended by trained personnel (Female)
E.15.0.0-Physicians per 10,000 inhabitants ratio
E.26.0.0-Annual national health expenditure as a proportion of the GDP
E.27.0.0-Annual public health expenditure as a proportion of the national health expenditure



Health Situation Analysis and Trends Summary


Country Chapter Summary from Health in the Americas, 1998.

 

SURINAME

GENERAL SITUATION AND TRENDS

Socioeconomic, Political, and Demographic Overview

Suriname is located on the northeast coast of South America, and covers 163,820 km2. In the north, it borders the Atlantic Ocean, in the east, south, and west it borders French Guiana, Brazil, and Guyana. The country’s topography encompasses a narrow coastal plain that extends from east to west, a savanna belt, and a highland tropical rainforest that borders Brazil.

The country is divided into 10 administrative districts that are governed through the Ministry of Regional Development, and each district is divided into "ressorts." Each of the country’s 62 "ressorts" has its own council. The National Assembly has legislative power in Suriname and consists of 51 members who are elected for a period of five years. The President, who is chosen by the Assembly, has executive power.

The Vital Statistics Bureau estimated a population of 423,400 in 1996, 70% living in Paramaribo (222,800) and Wanica (72,400) districts on 0.4 % of the land. The population increased through 1971; thereafter, growth rates slowed and some years even showed a decrease. The urban area comprises the capital city of Paramaribo and parts of Wanica district, and has relatively dense population and an economy based on commerce, services, and industry. The rural area, which includes portions of the coast and the savanna belt, has agriculture, fishing, and bauxite mining as the main economic activities. The Interior, comprising about 80% of the country, is sparsely populated by tribal communities who depend on hunting, fishing, and slash-and-burn agriculture. Forestry, gold mining, and tourism operations also are conducted in the Interior. Birth rates decreased to their lowest levels of 20.2 per 1,000 in 1994 and 20.7 in 1995. Fertility rates declined from 134.8 per 1,000 women aged 15–44 in 1982 to 90.9 in 1991. There is also a lack of reliable data from the Interior, where fertility rates are higher. From 1972 to 1996, emigration to the Netherlands was a determinant of population dynamics. However, since 1994, it lost its primary role and growth now depends mostly on the balance between births and deaths. In 1994, 2,836 people emigrated, and 1,716 did in 1995, after rules for traveling to the Netherlands were tightened. Legal immigration, mostly from the Netherlands, Guyana, and the Far East accounted for nearly 2,300 people annually from 1989 to 1991, decreasing to 1,350 in 1994–1995. The ethnic composition of Suriname’s population is 35% Creole, 35% East Indian, 16% Indonesian, 8 % Maroon or Bushnegro, 3% Amerindian, 2% Chinese, and 1 % European, Lebanese, and others. The main religions are Christianity (42%), Hinduism, (27%), and Islam (20%).

During the 1980s, the country experienced political and economic problems as a result of falling bauxite and aluminum prices and the suspension of development aid from the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The 1986–1992 period was marked by war in the Interior, with civilian rule being re-established in 1992. During this period, the population suffered the decay and destruction of the infrastructure. The health sector was affected by a shrinking financial base, lack of investments in and maintenance of facilities and equipment, a scarcity of drugs and reagents, and the departure of trained public health professionals, medical specialists, and registered nurses.

Suriname’s economy continues to depend on the bauxite sector. Gold mining activities are growing but they also bring about social and public health disruptions such as increased crime and violence, prostitution, drug abuse, and sexually transmitted diseases. Tensions exist between prospectors and villagers, who see creeks turned into mud streams and their access to ancestral lands limited. Development of the timber sector is a source of debate in parliament and the media. Investors applied for timber concessions of 2 million hectares, but environmental concerns delayed decisions.

Suriname was admitted to CARICOM in July 1995, but to participate in the market, it must produce competitive goods. During the country’s 15 years of crisis, the deterioration of the infrastructure has hindered attempts to increase production and exports. Rice production, a major source of income, suffers from inadequate infrastructure to limit climatic effects of heavy rainfall and drought. High proportions of domestic goods are imported, and less than 1 % of the land is dedicated to food production.

Inflation was 44% in 1992, 143% in 1993, 368% in 1994, and 236% in 1995. The situation improved after the Government instituted structural economic adjustment programs, which resulted in economic and monetary stability and economic growth of 4% in real terms in 1996. The Government had a surplus of cash, made possible by the rise in aluminum prices and the success of a direct tax collection system. The Central Bank intervened, building up currency and gold reserves, and controlling the exchange rate (from a level of Sf 600 to about Sf 400 per U.S. dollar in 1996). The prospects for increased revenue are limited, but a 15% value-added tax was planned for 1997.

Seventy percent of the population was living under the poverty line in 1993. Data showed a decrease of jobs in the formal sector in the 1980s that continued during the 1992–1995 period, when they declined by 4%. The public sector accounted for 40% of formal employment in 1994. In 1990–1994, household surveys that considered the informal sectors in Paramaribo and Wanica showed that unemployment declined from 16% in 1990 to 11% in 1994. Between 32% and 35% of the working population were women. Government structural adjustment resulted in job losses. The average real wage fell by 65% between 1990 and 1993. Wages for unskilled jobs decreased to less than US$ 10/month in 1994.The structural adjustment program was discontinued in 1996, and emphasis placed on "empowerment of the people." Other planned adjustments, however, such as the value-added tax and tariffs for hospitals and utilities that reflect real costs of the services, could affect the majority of the population.

It is recognized that one-parent households (usually headed by women) suffer more from poverty. Of 80,000 persons receiving an allowance from the Ministry of Social Affairs and Housing, 60%–65% are women. 

About 7,000 refugees returned to the Interior in 1992, but they still lack adequate housing and public services in their tribal lands. Many schools and health centers were rebuilt in 1995 and 1996, but recovery of other infrastructure in the Interior is hampered by logistical and financial problems. Services such as police and vital statistics have not been restored. Armed miners and drug traffickers threaten safety, while malaria and other diseases endanger health. Consequently, many refugees moved to Paramaribo, joining the 13,000 displaced persons already there, and further straining the housing and infrastructure. 

Of the 39,000 government workers in 1994, 67% had attained only primary education; 33%, secondary education; and only 4 % had higher education.

Mortality and Morbidity Profile 

The crude mortality rate fluctuated between 7.3 per 1,000 and 6.2 per 1,000 in the 1986–1996 period. Life expectancy at birth continued to be relatively low, with the latest figures estimated at 68.8 years for males and females combined. Figures on death rates by sex are not available. In the past 15 years, approximately 85% of deaths were medically certified. On average, about 15% of medical death certificates are in the category of unspecified diseases. In the 1992–1994 period, the leading causes of death were hypertension and heart disease, accounting for 17% of all deaths (1,167); cerebrovascular accidents, 11% (758 deaths); malignant neoplasms, 9% (601); accidents and trauma, 8 % (520); gastroenteritis, 5% (377); conditions originating in the perinatal period, 4% (294); diabetes mellitus, 4% (279); pneumonia and influenza, 3% (177); suicide, 2% (130); and cirrhosis of the liver, 2% (123). The most significant trends were: a decline from 274 suicides in the 1983–1985 period to 130 in the 1992–1994 period (pesticides were the most commonly used method, followed by hanging); a decrease in deaths due to accidents and trauma from 733 in the 1989–1991 period to 520 in 1992–1994; and an increase in deaths due to gastroenteritis from 280 in 1989–1991 to 377 in 1992–1994.

From 1994 to 1996, the Bureau of Public Health, the Regional Health Service, the Medical Mission, and several hospitals undertook to improve their health information systems. The basis for a national system is in place: morbidity data are collected in all care institutions, but are not analyzed. Standardization of definitions and procedures for comparisons is needed.

 

SPECIFIC HEALTH PROBLEMS

Analysis by Population Group 

The number of live births per year declined from 9,835 in 1992 to 8,717 in 1995. The Medical Mission, which provides health service in the Interior, recorded 1,179 live births in that region in 1996. About 80% of deliveries take place in hospitals, the rest are attended by midwives and traditional birth attendants in the Interior. In 1996, the Diakonessenhuis Hospital reported low birthweight in 12% of 1,710 live births. The number of infant deaths during the period 1992-1994 was 604, corresponding to an infant mortality rate of about 22 per 1,000 live births. Data were not computed for the Interior, but before the war, 20% of deaths and 10% of births occurred in the Interior each year. During the same period, the national perinatal mortality rate was 31 per 1,000 live births (47.5 per 1,000 births in the Interior, in 1994) and the main causes of death in the age group under 1 year old, were conditions originating in the perinatal period (284 deaths), gastroenteritis (70 deaths), congenital anomalies (43 deaths), malnutrition (34 deaths), and pneumonia (22 deaths), representing 75% of total deaths. In the 1988–1990 period, the annual mean mortality rate due to diarrhea was 5.7 per 1,000 births, compared with 2.6 for 1992–1994.

In 1993, the General Statistics Bureau estimated the 1–4-year-old population to be 37,400 (9% of the total). There were 149 deaths among 1–4-year-olds in 1992-1994 (mean specific mortality rate of 1.2 per 1,000). The leading causes of deaths in that period were gastroenteritis (40 cases), accidents and trauma (16), malnutrition (10), and pneumonia (10), accounting for 50% of deaths. The annual mean mortality due to gastroenteritis was 23.3 per 100,000 in the 1988–1990 period, and was estimated to be 35.6 for 1992–1994. The yearly mean mortality rates for pneumonia were 20.9 and 8.9 in the 1988–1990 and 1992–1994 periods, respectively.

Hospitalizations of malnourished children increased from 307 in 1992–1993 to 355 in 1994–1995. This also represents a 3.5-fold increase with respect to 1988–1989. In 1993, most malnutrition-related hospitalizations in s’Lands Hospital affected infants of 6–9 months. In 1994, an increase in hospitalizations involved a majority of 1–2-year-olds. The 1–2-year-olds appeared more vulnerable than infants, who could benefit from breast-feeding. A 1994 study on the health status of former refugees in Marowijne district showed that 17% of 278 children aged 0 to 6 years were malnourished (97 % chronically), but none of the 0–6-month-old infants were. In 1995, an unpublished study at a clinic for children under 5 years old in a rural village south of Paramaribo (populated mostly by Indonesians and East Indians) found more than 25% of children with a weight-for-age below the third percentile of the United States National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) standard, while a 1989 study reported 8%.

Acute malnutrition increased during the 1980s in primary school children in Paramaribo. In 1994, a study in Paramaribo among 1,871 schoolchildren aged 4–11 found that 13% of boys had a weight-for-age below the third percentile, twice that of girls (7%). Wasting (weight-for-height below percentile 3 of standard) was the same for boys and girls, with an overall prevalence of 16%. A similar finding was made in 1989 (18%).

The 1993 population of 5–14-year-olds was estimated by the General Statistics Bureau to be 89,200, 22.1% of the total. There were 127 deaths in this age group between 1992 and 1994. The leading causes of death were accidents and trauma (54 cases).

The General Statistics Bureau estimated the 1993 population of 15–44-year-olds to be 199,400 (49% of the total), with 101,200 males and 98,200 females. A total of 1,192 deaths were registered in this age group during 1992–1994. The leading causes of death were accidents and trauma, with 20% of all deaths (233 cases); hypertension and heart disease with 9% (106); and malignant neoplasms with 6% (70). More male (64%) than female deaths were recorded.

Between 1991 and 1994, maternal mortality rates fluctuated between 6 and 12 per 10,000 live births, but according to one study, 42 maternal deaths occurred in 1991 and 1992, a maternal mortality rate of 22.4, or 3.5 times higher than the official figures. In 1988, 17% of baby deliveries occurred in mothers under 20 years old. The Diakonessenhuis Hospital reported in 1994 that 10% of births were to women under age 20.

Between January and August 1994, 622 teenagers visited Stichting Lobi (the family planning foundation) for a pregnancy test, and 15% were pregnant. Figures from s’Lands Hospital showed that out of 262 abortions performed there, 40 (15%) were for women under age 20. It was estimated that trained personnel attended 80% of births in 1994. In 1992, a contraceptive prevalence survey done in a sample of women aged 15–44 found that 8% of the women knew nothing about contraceptives, 58% knew four or more methods, and 38% were current contraceptive users. Of the women sampled, 27% were married, 20% were in common-law unions, 25% in visiting partner, and 28% were single.

The stated order of preference for different contraceptive methods was the pill (54% of women), the condom (23%), tubal ligation (9%, mostly women over age 34), injectable forms (8%), and the IUD (5%, mostly women over age 25). Seventy percent of women between 15 and 19 years old who had partners did not use a contraceptive method at the time of the survey, and 59% of all adolescents who had been pregnant stated their pregnancies were unplanned. The total fertility rate fell from 7.3 per woman in the 1950s to 2.9 in 1990.

The 1993 population of 45–64-year-olds was estimated at 24,200 males and 26,300 females. A total of 1,661 deaths were recorded in this age group during the 1992–1994 period. As in previous periods, hypertension and heart disease remained the most important causes of death with 382 cases (23% of deaths), followed by malignant neoplasms with 231 deaths (14%), cerebrovascular accidents (226 or 14%), and diabetes mellitus (114 or 7%). In contrast with other age groups, accidents and trauma ranked fifth, with 97 deaths (6%).  

In 1993, it was estimated that 5% of the total population was in the 65 and older age group. There were 3,188 deaths in the 1992–1994 period, 51% (1,635) among males. The most frequent causes of death were hypertension and heart disease with 606 cases (19%), followed by cerebrovascular accidents (448 deaths, or 14%), malignant neoplasms (269 deaths, or 8%), gastroenteritis (167 deaths, or 5%), and diabetes mellitus with (137 deaths, or 4%). The proportion of deaths by group of causes was similar between males and females, except for cerebrovascular accidents, which were more frequent among females (17% of deaths) than males (12%). In contrast to causes of death in the 1989–1991 period, gastroenteritis appeared among the top five causes of death, while accidents and trauma disappeared from the top five causes.

Groups such as refugees and those in certain urban areas and the Interior are two high-risk groups. In 1994, a study on returned refugees in Marowijne found that sanitation and housing were poor. The study estimated immunization coverage to be 42%, lower than the national coverage of 71% in that year. There are several infrastructure problems, particularly with electricity and piped water services. In the surrounding villages, pit latrines either had no lids or were too full. River water was used for drinking, bathing, and other household purposes. Rainwater and well water were also used for drinking. In the semiurban Moengo and Albina areas, garbage was not collected, and sewage systems did not work. Theft, assault, prostitution, and drug abuse were rampant.

In 1996, a house survey was conducted in a poor neighborhood of Paramaribo. It has 824 households with a population of about 6,000, 60% under 18 years of age. Of those households participating (73%), 82% reported a monthly income below the poverty level (US$ 100/month). Piped water was available in 75% of households, 17% at all times. In 44% of households, people did not receive at least one daily meal with vegetables and meat or fish. A bed was present in 57% of homes.

Analysis by Type of Disease 

In 1993–1994, Suriname had a dengue epidemic, resulting in 201 confirmed cases, 109 hospitalizations, and 10 deaths. Dengue type-4 virus was isolated at that time. In 1996, another epidemic occurred with 182 hospitalizations and 1 death, but only 2 cases were confirmed.

Malaria is a major public health problem that limits development of the Interior. Due to overlapping diagnostic services of the Medical Mission and the malaria control unit of the Bureau of Public Health, many cases may be counted more than once. In 1996, malaria reached unprecedented levels, with 23% positives out of 68,674 slides examined for malaria. Plasmodium falciparum was found in 94% of positive slides, P. vivax in 5%, and P. malariae in 1%, while mixed infections (P. falciparum with P. vivax or P. malariae) were seen in 15 slides. Almost one-quarter of the reported 11,059 positives seen by the Medical Mission in the Interior were children under 5 years old. In 1996, 14 malaria deaths were reported. Malaria control activities resumed in 1993, although pre-war levels have not been attained.

Schistosomiasis transmission is restricted to limited areas in the coastal zone, mainly in the district of Saramacca, 40 km west of the capital city. No recent data are available on its prevalence.

Suspected cases of leptospirosis increased at a rate of around 50% per year, from 50 in 1992 to more than 200 in 1996. However, the number of confirmed cases has remained at around 50 per year since 1991.

The last confirmed case of poliomyelitis was in 1982. In the 1988–1992 period no cases of diphtheria were reported, but there were 33 reported cases of suspected pertussis in 1990, indicating the vulnerability left by low coverage. In the 1993–1996 period, no cases of diphtheria were reported, but in 1996 two suspected cases of pertussis were investigated. One case of neonatal tetanus was seen in 1988 and one in 1989, but there were no cases between 1990 and 1996. One case of tetanus was reported in 1994, no cases in 1995, and two in 1996. In 1992 there was an outbreak of rubella, with 17 suspected cases reported from July to December. In 1996, 10 confirmed and 20 suspected cases were seen. In 1994 there were 49 reported cases of mumps; in 1995, 863 cases; and in 1996, 124 cases.

Girls in the first year of grammar school receive the rubella vaccine. Since 1993 the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine has been given to children at 12 months of age. In 1992, the national vaccination coverage fell to 74%, and in the coastal area, the Regional Health Service achieved only 54% coverage. Reasons for low coverage were lack of DTP and polio vaccines in the country for 3 to 4 months, the breakdown of the public transport system, and the fact that more mothers were working. The immunization program was also hurt by the departure of trained staff members of the Bureau of Public Health and the Regional Health Service, the agencies responsible for EPI supervision and implementation.

In 1993 and 1994, DTP3 and OPV3 coverage rates remained low at 76% and 74%. Coverage was 85% in 1995, but the delivery system was weak, and in 1996 coverage dropped again to 79%. Measles vaccination rates were 62% in 1991 and 68% in 1992. After a special mass campaign, in which 94% of a target population of 46,000 children under age 5 were vaccinated, routine measles vaccination rates returned to the low levels of 61% in 1993, 71% in 1994, 79% in 1995, and 71% in 1996.

The first case of AIDS was diagnosed in 1983, and as of 31 December 1996 597 cases of HIV-infection (including AIDS) had been reported. The male-to-female ratio in this group was 1.7:1. From 1992 to 1996 the percentage of new HIV/AIDS cases and of persons tested were between 4% and 9%. Recently, the first AIDS case was reported from an Amerindian village near the Brazilian border.

Syphilis reporting varied in recent years, from 80 cases in 1988, to 295 in 1992, and 225 in 1995 (or 5% of all STDs). The male-to-female ratio was 0.8:1. In the 1988–1992 period, gonorrhea cases averaged about 1,600 cases per year. In 1995 there were 2,072 cases (42% of all STDs). At sentinel stations there were 450 cases in 1991 and 1,840 in 1995.

In February 1992 there was an outbreak of cholera near the border with French Guiana. Twelve cases were reported, of which seven were confirmed, including an 11-year-old girl who died. There was no further transmission of the disease and no cases of cholera reported in the 1993–1996 period.

The prevalence of leprosy decreased during the 1980s from 58.6 per 100,000 in 1981 to 25.8 per 100,000 population in 1989. The decline continued slowly in 1990, 1991, and 1992 with rates of 15.4, 14.1, and 12.4 per 100,000, respectively. In 1996 the rate was 11.0 per 100,000.

Since 1990, between 47 and 72 cases of tuberculosis have been reported per year, In 1995, 6 of 72 reported tuberculosis cases were HIV-positive, and in 1996, 14 of 63.

From August 1992 to February 1993 there was a countrywide epidemic of shigellosis, caused by a multiple resistant strain of Shigella flexneri, including a total of 107 hospitalized cases and 26 deaths. Deteriorating sanitary conditions and poor nutritional status created opportunities for shigellosis to become endemic. In 1994, 229 cases and 17 deaths were recorded, and in 1995 there were 235 cases and 12 deaths.

Typhoid fever incidence rates per 100,000 were 5.7, 5.6, and 6.4 in 1984, 1985, and 1986, respectively. In the 1988–1996 period the incidence rates fluctuated between 1.7 and 2.7 per 100,000.

Strongyloidiasis, ascariasis, and other parasitic helminthic infestations are major health problems, especially among young children, about 60% of them in the 0–14-year age group. Recent surveys in Paramaribo have found prevalence rates of about 60% in the general population. Since 1991, strongyloides have become the leading soil-transmitted helminths. The program for their control examined 5,497 fecal smears in 1995. Of these, 35% were positive for Strongyloides stercoralis, 27% for Ascaris lumbricoides, 18% for Trichuris trichura, and 7% for Necator americanus, several of them being mixed infestations. 

A total of 892 malignant neoplasm cases were diagnosed between 1991 and 1993. More than 80% occurred among people 40 years and older, 59% were females, and 48% were Creoles.

Cancer of the cervix (140 cases) followed by breast cancer (116 cases) were the most frequently observed malignant neoplasms among females, while prostate cancer (66 cases) and lymphoma (35 cases) were the most frequent among males. Since 1990, 45 cervical cancer cases were reported, on average, each year. Of those cases, 43% were diagnosed in the 25–44-year age group. Between 10 and 25 women die from cervical cancer yearly.

There were 49 cases of murder and manslaughter in 1994 and 50 in 1995; and 568 personal assaults in 1994 and 537 in 1995. In 1993, the Police registered 620 applications for assistance at its Juvenile Affairs Division in Paramaribo. These cases were mainly among youths (70% were boys) between the ages of 12 and 16, who were victims of violence or sexual abuse; were runaways, school dropouts, shoplifters, or juvenile prostitutes; or were considered "unmanageable" by their parents. In 1994, 700 requests for assistance were recorded, 70% linked to children from low socioeconomic classes.

In 1993, a study based on police and hospital data revealed that 54% of police reports involved women. Twenty percent of reports involved women abused by male partners or ex-partners, violence that was often repeated. In 80% of cases of violent abuse against women, the crime took place at home. Academic Hospital emergency unit data showed that 95 % of victims of sexual assault were female, and 20% were girls under 10 years of age. A total of 99 rape cases were recorded in 1994, and 108 in 1995. Little information is available on drug use.

Problems with mental health care are associated with the lack of community-based services for the mentally ill. Ambulatory outreach is very limited and there is only one psychiatric hospital. Care delivery is strictly centralized and mainly oriented toward tranquilizing medication and social constraint of seriously deranged patients. About 60% of inpatients at the psychiatric hospital were over 65 years of age and had been hospitalized for more than 30 years.

In 1995, a survey was conducted among 202 6-year-olds and 214 12-year-old schoolchildren in Paramaribo and Wanica. The 6-year-olds had an average decayed, missing, filled teeth (DMFT) index of 6.05, and 13% had flawless teeth, while the 12-year-olds had an average DMFT of 5.6. 

Piped drinking water is provided to 95% of the urban population. About 90% of urban dwellers have house connections and another 5% have easy access. About 70% of the rural population has piped water in the house and 20% near the house. People in the Interior depend on water from rivers and creeks for their supply. 

Public water supplies use groundwater, but saline intrusion in the coastal area affects its quality. To improve quality in these areas, water from wells is mixed with piped water. In many areas piped water is not safe for drinking because of broken mains. People break the mains below ground level to secure water because pressure is often insufficient to supply individual household lines.

New buildings are required to install septic tanks for sewage disposal. In Paramaribo there is a functioning sewage treatment plant. About 15% of households in Paramaribo use pit latrines and about 5% have no facilities. In rural districts, pit latrines are the dominant forms of excreta disposal. The disposal of solid wastes is a major problem, particularly in urban areas.

The health and environmental effects of agricultural pesticides and fertilizers, hydroelectric power plants, mining, the use of insecticides in the Interior against malaria mosquitoes. The problem of pesticide use is compounded because aerial spraying leaves pesticide residue on roofs where people collect rainwater.

Other environmental problems receiving attention in the media are the disposal of feces from septic tanks by sanitation trucks into the Suriname river, the open mining of sand for construction, which turns large areas into lakes, and the use of mercury by gold prospectors along rivers in the Interior.

 

RESPONSE OF THE HEALTH SYSTEM

National Health Plans and Policies

To protect the health status of the population, the Government formulated the Policy Paper 1996, which aims to provide material and social support on a needs basis to individuals and groups in vulnerable socioeconomic situations, and ultimately to enable target groups to become self-sufficient. The Ministry of Social Affairs and Housing provides the existing system of supports, which includes cash transfers to the elderly and to poor families, child allowances (covering 27,659 mothers and 64,000 children in 1994), and free medical care for the poor (about 25% of the population). A system providing subsidized packages of commodities was set up to safeguard the availability of foods and a basic nutritional status. Today, there are 130,000 recipients of these packages, including households and institutions. The system will be phased out, providing cash payments amounting to about US$ 37 each, an amount that is insufficient to meet the cost of living of the elderly and the poor.

The 1997–2001 Policy Paper of the Ministry of Health identified two core problems in the health care system: financing and the lack of trained personnel. The focus of the Ministry’s policies for the 1997–2001 period is to stop the decline of the health care sector. Measures planned to regulate and reorganize the system include institutionalization of a National Health Council; strengthening of management; updating health legislation; continued privatization of government hospitals, the Regional Health Service, and other institutions; and restoration of health care facilities in the Interior. The Policy Paper gives priority to "participation of local communities, mobilization of local resources, and decentralization of health systems management." Programs aimed at the target groups of women, children, and the working class are diarrhea control, immunization, and cervical cancer screening. The Government will implement "a compulsory national health insurance system for the total population, including mechanisms to regulate salaries of service providers, to control prices of drugs and other inputs, and to control the costs of intramural care." Financial policies will focus on stopping open-ended financing of hospitals, budgeting programs, and the gradual elimination of subsidies. Targets for health care budgeting, including the limit of government expenditure to between 6% and 8% of GNP, are addressed in the Policy Paper. Intramural care should be limited to less than 52% of the health care budget.

The Central Office of the Ministry of Health will be reorganized to enable it to function as a center for policy development, supervision, and coordination. The provision of services to the public will stop being a function of the Ministry of Health. Priority is also given to the rehabilitation of the Medical Mission facilities in the Interior. The process of privatization of the Regional Health Service is ongoing, as well as changes in its organization that emphasize decentralization of management, strengthening of local health centers, and community participation. Disease control programs given high priority are those against malaria; dengue; schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthes; sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV-infections; leprosy; and tuberculosis. In March 1993, the National Assembly ratified the International Convention of the Rights of the Child. New legislation has been formulated to bring the laws of the land in line with this Convention.

Organization of the Health Sector

The Central Office of the Ministry includes the Medical, Nursing, and Pharmacological Inspectorates; the Legal Department; the Planning Department; and a General Administrative Department. Health legislation is outdated and, except for a few changes in laws regulating pharmacies, there have been only ad hoc and minor adaptations. Updating legislation is a priority, especially in the areas of strengthening the control functions of the Ministry of Health, and the establishment of a National Health Council. The Legal Department of the Ministry of Health is charged with coordinating efforts with the Ministry of Justice and the Permanent Commission on Health in the National Assembly to update health legislation.

Registration and certification of physicians, midwives, and pharmacists and their assistants is regulated and supervised by the Ministry of Health. Physicians are licensed by the Ministry and need permission from the Director of Health for clinical practice. Other health professions are not recognized or regulated. The Pharmaceutical Inspectorate enforces laws on the registration and importation of drugs and vaccines. There are no regulations regarding technologies. The Public Health Laboratory of the Bureau of Public Health is responsible for quality control of food and other products, including drinking water. The Environmental Inspectorate of the Bureau is responsible for inspection of restaurants, food-handlers, food processing companies, and public as well as private sanitary systems, including the disposal of solid wastes and sewage.

Health Services and Resources

The Bureau of Public Health is the main organization for health care and includes a health education department, an epidemiology and biostatistics department, and several programs for family health and disease control. The Bureau has about 400 employees, of whom 20 have university degrees. This office provides information on disease distribution through its epidemiology unit, which operates a surveillance system on communicable diseases in cooperation with the Regional Health Service. The system depends on weekly reports of 27 sentinel reporting stations. Other organizations with disease control activities and health promotion are the Dermatologische Dienst of the Ministry of Health, the Veterinary Service of the Ministry of Agriculture, the so-called "Cross Associations" (nongovernmental organizations with well-baby clinics), and foundations such as Stichting Lobi and the Youth Dental Service Foundation.

The Dermatologische Dienst has the following goals: the control of STDs and HIV/AIDS; the elimination of leprosy by the year 2000 (an official policy target of the Ministry of Health); and the control of dermatological conditions such as yaws, leishmaniasis, and other communicable diseases. Services are provided through a central polyclinic in Paramaribo, the district hospital in Nickerie, and the district health center in Wonoredjo. Each year, the Dermatologische Dienst handles 24,000 patient visits and performs 46,000 laboratory tests. Between 25% and 30% of visits are due to STDs, and only 7% have been related to leprosy. The institution offers syphilis serology for the hospitals (except the Academic Hospital), the blood transfusion service, and the Regional Health Service. It employs 3 dermatologists; 1 general physician; 18 registered nurses; 2 social workers; and 21 administrative, technical, and housekeeping personnel.

The Stichting Lobi foundation promotes family planning and the prevention of cervical cancer deaths. Priority target groups are adolescents, young adults, and inhabitants of the Interior. Stichting Lobi estimates that of 80,000 men and 84,000 women, 45% need family planning services, which would require some 470,000 rounds of the contraceptive pill and 5 million condoms per year. It currently distributes 320,000 rounds of oral contraceptives and 550,000 condoms, or 68% and 11%, respectively, of the estimated needs. Stichting Lobi also screens women for cervical cancer, with 10,000 to 12,000 Pap tests yearly.

The Youth Dental Service Foundation promotes dental health by providing free dental care to children 0–17 years of