Country Chapter Summary from Health in the Americas, 1998.
HONDURAS
GENERAL SITUATION AND TRENDS
Socioeconomic, Political, and Demographic
Overview
Honduras has a surface area of 112,492 km2 and a population
density of 46 inhabitants per km2. In urban areas, the
population density is 184 inhabitants per km2. The terrain is
predominantly mountainous, with 19 watersheds. The
countrys principal environmental problem is
deforestation. Between 1964 and 1990, forests were reduced by
some 25,899 km2 (34%). It is estimated that between 1992 and
1993, as much as 7% of the forest cover reported in 1990 was
lost, which indicates a deforestation rate of more than 1,000
km2. The country is divided into 18 departments and 297
municipios with 3,730 towns and 27,764 small rural
communities. With the adoption of the Municipal Government
Law (1990), decentralization was strengthened and 5% of
Government revenues were transferred to the municipal
governments.
In 1990 a program for structural adjustment of the economy
was established and policies and incentives were gradually
put in place to promote the most efficient use of resources,
coupled with social compensation programs, such as the
Honduran Social Investment Fund, the Family Allocation
Program, and the Social Housing Fund. These programs are
designed to relieve the effects of the adjustment in the
poorest segments of the population. The share of these three
programs in social spending increased from 3.6% in 1990 to
13.6% in 1995.
The per capita gross
domestic product (GDP) was US$ 702.7 in 1990 and US$ 722.0 in
1995, with an average annual growth rate of 0.58%. In the
same period, the countrys total foreign debt increased
23.5%, climbing from US$ 3,517.8 million in 1990 to US$
4,343.5 million in 1995; public debt accounted for 90% of
this amount.
The predominant economic activities continue to be
agriculture, forestry, hunting, and fishing, Honduras
experienced sustained growth in the manufacturing industry
(export processing and assembly) in the 1990s; this economic
activity generated some 44,000 jobs as of 1994. The
economically active population (EAP) makes up 35% of the
total population. In 1995 the underemployment rates were 34
% in rural areas and 17% in urban areas. In 1993 women made up
31% of the EAP: 40% of the urban EAP and 22% of the rural
EAP. Twenty-four percent of households are headed by women
and 65% of those are poor. In 1994, unemployment and
underemployment affected 73% of young men and 69% of young
women aged 1519 years. Among those aged 2029, in
contrast, the percentages were 43% among males and 45% among
females; in the group aged 3044 years 29% of males and
40% of females were unemployed or underemployed.
Inflation rose from 21.7% in 1994 to 29.5% in 1995. The
impact of this increase was felt especially in the cost of
the basic market basket of food, which jumped 144% between
1990 and 1995. It is estimated that the national population
consumes, on average, only 77% of the required daily caloric
intake. During the 19801994 period, per capita
availability of food fell 10% because production grew at a
slower rate than the population. In March 1994, revealed the
percentage of households that fell below the poverty line was
75.6% (54.5% of households were indigent).
During the
19901994 period, illiteracy declined from 31.3% to
22.8% in 1994; illiteracy in rural areas remained 49% higher
than in urban areas. The average level of educational
attainment for the total population in 1994 was 4.2 years; it
is estimated that 60% of the EAP has fewer than three years
of schooling.
The housing shortage in 1995 totaled 700,000 dwellings. Of
urban dwellings, 64% are overcrowded, 33% do not have a
regular supply of drinking water, and 41% lack sanitation
systems. In rural areas, only 16% of dwellings are considered
adequate; more than 81% have no access to drinking water,
excreta disposal services, and electricity.
Based on the last population census, carried out in 1988, the
estimated population in 1996 was 5.6 million, with a growth
rate of 2.8%. In 1996 the population aged 04 years made
up 15.7% of the total; the population aged 59 years,
14.2%; the population aged 1014 years, 12.9%; the
population aged 1519 years, 11.5%; and the population
aged 60 and over, 5.1%.
It is estimated that in 1995 urban dwellers made up 43% of
the total population. Most of the urban population is
concentrated in two cities: Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula
(32.9% and 16.2% of the total urban population,
respectively). There is a significant geographic/sex
differential in this migration: females tend to migrate
primarily to the major urban centers, whereas males migrate
mainly to agricultural areas. In 1995, the total estimated
net rate of internal migration was 1.6% (1.7% for
males and 1.4% for females). Most migrants are between
15 and 44 years of age, and the largest proportion are in the
2029 age group. Emigration also has been increasing: in
1989 the net emigration rate was 1.1% (1.3% for
males and 1.0% for females).
Life expectancy at birth, which was 64 years for the total
population in the period 19851990, was estimated at 71
years for women and 66 years for men in 1996. The estimated
total fertility rate, according to the 19951996
National Epidemiology and Family Health Survey (ENESF), was
4.9, 6.3 in rural areas, and 3.9 in urban areas. The birth
rate per 1,000 population was 33.4 in 1996.
There are eight culturally differentiated ethnic groups in
Honduras: the Lencas, the Pech, the Garifunas, the Chortis,
the Tawahkas, the Tolupanes or Xicaques, the Miskitos, and
the English-speaking black population. In 1993 it was
estimated the size of this population at 253,790 (5.97% of
the total population). The areas inhabited by the indigenous
populations are among the most severely underserved.
Mortality
Profile
In 1990, the last year for which information is available, an
estimated 44.2% of deaths went unreported. According to
estimates of the Secretariat for Planning, the crude death
rate in 1996 was 5.8 per 1,000 population; a total of 32,666
deaths occurred, of which 18,510 were males and 14,156 were
females. Of the total number of deaths, 15% (5,355) were
reported in connection with hospital discharge figures.
In 1990, the five leading causes of death in the general
population were ischemic and hypertensive diseases, diseases
of pulmonary circulation, and other forms of heart disease
(19.0%); accidents and violence (13.0%); diseases of the
respiratory system (9.5%); intestinal infectious diseases
(9.0%); and malignant neoplasms (8.2%). The leading causes of
infant mortality in 1990 (1,624 registered deaths with 638
attributed to ill-defined conditions) were intestinal
infectious diseases (28.2%); diseases of the respiratory
system (21.8%); and certain disorders originating in the
perinatal period (20.6%).
Because of the aforementioned problems with the registration
of deaths, the country relies on other sources to calculate
mortality figures. These include national surveys conducted
on specific subjects and population censuses carried out in
certain geographical areas, which provide mortality data
based on various methodologies. The data on maternal
mortality are considered reliable and are based on
prospective studies carried out in 1990, which indicate a
rate of 221 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. The
infant mortality rate decreased from 50 per 1,000 live births
in 1990 to 42 per 1,000 in 1994.
Hospital deaths increased in absolute numbers from 4,433 in
1993 to 5,355 in 1996 and from 10% to 16% with respect to
total deaths for those years, which were estimated at 33,300,
and 32,666, respectively. The leading causes of hospital
death between 1993 and 1996, based on ICD-9 classification,
were diseases of the respiratory system (11.8%); ischemic and
hypertensive diseases, diseases of pulmonary circulation, and
other forms of heart disease (9.1%); and accidents and
violence (8.2%). These three leading causes are the same
(although not in the same order) as those reported in 1990.
Other important causes of death were malignant neoplasms
(5.7%), viral diseases (5.4%), and AIDS (5.4%).
SPECIFIC HEALTH PROBLEMS
Analysis by Population Group
During the 1980s, the percentage of children with low
birthweight who were delivered in health facilities of the
Ministry of Public Health and the IHSS ranged from 7.0% to
8.7%. The figure increased to 9.2% in 1992. The percentage of
malnutrition in children under 5 increased from 48.6% in 1987
to 52.5% in 1991.
The percentage of exclusively breast-fed infants (in the 0-
to 3-month age group) increased from 36.7% in 1991 to 42.4
% in 1995. The proportion of children aged 69 months who
were being breast-fed with supplementary feeding was 69.2%,
and the proportion who continued to be breast-fed into the
second year of life (2023 months) was 45.4%. The
average duration of exclusive breast-feeding is 2.1 months.
A comparison of the leading causes of death in children under
5, based on the last two epidemiological surveys, reveals
that acute respiratory infections continue to be in the
forefront, accounting for 22% of deaths in 19911992 and
23% in 1996. The next leading cause is diarrheal diseases,
which increased from 19% to 21% during the same interval.
In 1994, an estimated 73.1% of children aged 59 years
were enrolled in school. Several height censuses of
schoolchildren aged 69 carried out between 1986 and
1996. In 1996, the proportion of malnourished children
remained at 39%, (33.3% of girls and 42.2% of boys suffered
from chronic malnutrition).
According to the Ministry of Public Health, in 1995, 16.3% of
AIDS cases in the country occurred in the group aged
1024. According to the 19951996 ENESF, almost 45
% of 18-year-old women are sexually active and one-half of them
have been pregnant; 8.5% of 15-year-olds and about 40% of
18-year-olds are married; by age 20, 50% of women are
mothers. Among women aged 1519 years who live with a
male partner, 27.6% use some method of contraception; the
most frequently used method is oral contraception. In the
group 1619 years old, illiteracy declined from 11.9% in
1990 to 8.2% in 1994. Among males, this proportion dropped
from 14.4% to 10.1%, and among females, from 9.4% to 6.2% in
the same period.
There is no comprehensive information on the health status of
the elderly population. Hospital discharge data from 1996
reveal that 17.9% of discharges in the group aged 50 and over
were associated with alcohol dependency syndrome and 16.6
% were associated with diarrheal diseases.
In 1992, the national plan on workers health found six
major health problems: accidents in the workplace, pesticide
poisoning, noise pollution in the manufacturing sector,
reproductive health of workers, widespread use of chemical
products, and mental health problems (such as depression and
alcoholism). Little information is available on these
problems.
In Honduras, 4.5% of the population has some disability
requiring rehabilitation services. Although the age and sex
distribution of the disabled population is unknown. Fundación
Teletón has three centers (in Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula,
and Santa Rosa de Copán), which served 26,139 patients
between 1990 and 1995.
Malnutrition is widespread, affecting 95% of the indigenous
population under the age of 14. Of every 100 indigenous
people born, 68 die of infectious diseases. In 1993,
estimated life expectancy in this group was 36 years for
males and 43 years for females. Immunization coverage in 12
border municipios averages 60.3%.
Analysis by Type of Disease
The number of cases of malaria increased from 70,838 in 1992
to 74,487 in 1996 (API 18 and 16.5, respectively.) The
disease mainly struck the countrys northern and
southern areas, which together accounted for 52% of the cases
reported in 1996. The highest incidence rates per 1,000
population (46.4 in 1994 and 74.3 in 1995) occurred in the
swampy region on the east. In 1996, 98.9% of all cases were
due to Plasmodium vivax and 1.1% (1,003 cases) to
Plasmodium falciparum. In the period between 1993
and 1995, the largest proportion of malaria cases occurred in
females aged 1549 years (51% in 1993, 62% in 1994, and
53% in 1995).
In 1993, 2,687 clinical cases of dengue were reported. In
1994, the number was 4,687; in 1995, 28,064; and in 1996,
7,564. In 1995, almost 50% of dengue cases (16 were cases of
dengue hemorrhagic fever) were diagnosed in the central and
northern areas of the country. Between August and November
86% of the cases for the year were reported. In
19931994, most cases occurred in women and more than
half were in the population over 15 years of age.
Fourteen clinical cases of Chagas disease were reported
in 1994, 94 in 1995, and 66 as of October 1996. A study
conducted in 1996 in the municipio of San Francisco
de Opalaca, located in the department of Intibucá (where
Chagas disease is highly prevalent), found that 17.7
% of children under 5 were infected.
In 1992, 992 cases of cutaneous leishmaniasis were reported,
and in 1994, 1,083. The number increased 13% in 1995, when
1,230 cases were reported, 70% of which occurred in the
department of Olancho.
No cases of poliomyelitis have been reported since 1989.
There was one reported case of measles in 1995 and four in
1996; since 1991, no measles deaths have been registered.
Immunization coverage among children under 1 year old was 91
% in 1996. The rate among children under 5 increased with
respect to earlier years, and in 1996 it was 97.3% for the
oral polio vaccine, 96.5% for DTP, 98.7% for measles, and
100% for BCG. By 1995, coverage with two doses of tetanus
toxoid in women of childbearing age was 93%. Only three and
four cases of neonatal tetanus were reported in 1995 and
1996, respectively, which represents a reduction of 50% with
respect to 1994. In the 19901994 period, 63% of the
cases were reported in urban areas. A campaign to vaccinate
all health workers against hepatitis B was launched in 1994.
By 1995, 50% had been vaccinated and by 1996, 67.8%. In 1996,
200 cases of whooping cough were reported. There have been no
cases of diphtheria since 1981.
The prevalence of diarrheal diseases in children under 5 in
Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula decreased from 25.5% in 1987
to 18.8% in 1991 and 14.8% in 1996. In rural areas, the
prevalence has been variable (31.9% in 1987, 19.1% in 1991,
and 21.1% in 1996). Cholera re-emerged in the country in
October 1991, causing a hospital case fatality rate in
children under 5 of 4.2% in 1992 and 2.0% in 1996. In 1995
there were 4,748 cases of cholera nationwide, with a case
fatality rate of 1.6% (77 deaths); 56% of the cases were in
males and 76% of those occurred in persons aged 15 and over.
In 1996 there were 708 cases and 14 deaths, with a case
fatality rate of 1.9%; 53.2% of the cases occurred in men
and, of these, 40% were aged 15 and over.
There were 45 cases of tuberculous meningitis in 1992, 23 in
1993, and 15 in 1994, with 6, 5, and 11 cases, respectively,
in children under 5. The number of cases of tuberculosis
reported from 1992 to 1996 was 4,267. In the period
19931995, tuberculosis was associated with an annual
average of 1,289 hospital discharges, with a predominance of
cases in males (60%). The central and northeastern regions of
the country have the greatest number of cases. Extrapulmonary
tuberculosis occured at a rate of 5.2 cases per 100,000
population in 1989 and 2.0 cases in 1996. All detected cases
of pulmonary tuberculosis have been treated; only one
drug-resistant case has been identified. Of the 416 patients
who received the directly observed treatment, short-course,
380 were cured and 36 abandoned treatment.
The prevalence of leprosy remained constant at 0.1 (84 cases)
per 10,000 population from 1992 to 1995; an average of 3 new
cases per year were diagnosed between 1992 and 1995.
In 1992, two cases of human rabies were reported from the
metropolitan area; in 1993, no cases were reported; in 1994,
one case was reported from the countrys southern area;
and in 1995, two cases were reported, both from the
Tegucijalpa metropolitan area. In 1996, no cases were
reported. The number of cases of canine rabies decreased from
14 in 1995 to 9 in 1996. With respect to cysticercosis, a
study carried out in 1995 in animals slaughtered in
metropolitan meat-packing plants showed that 3% of the pigs
analyzed were infected with cysticerci.
In 1993 a rate of 19.0 AIDS cases per 100,000 population was
reported. In 1995, the rate was 17.7. The predominant route
of transmission is through heterosexual contact (82.9%). The
male-female ratio of 4:1 registered at the beginning of the
epidemic has shifted steadily over the years and is now
approaching parity (38% of women in 1996). The 2529 age
group is most affected (21.8%), although the number of cases
diagnosed in children under 5 has been increasing (from 1.9
% in 1987 to 4.8% in 1996). Geographically, the largest
proportion of AIDS cases are in the northern region of the
country (47.6%), followed by the central region (20.4%). Of
the cumulative total of 6,005 cases registered up to 1996,
1,041 have died. The percentage of infected women also has
risen: from 30.3% of 752 cases in 1992 to 38% of 734 in 1996.
In 1991, in San Pedro Sula the prevalence of HIV infection
was 3.6% among pregnant women and 14% among prostitutes. This
association between tuberculosis and AIDS has shown a rising
trend, with the rate increasing from 0.11 per 100,000
population in 1986 to 1.4 in 1996. The incidence of other
STDs continues to be higher in the metropolitan region and in
the northern part of the country. In the 19921995
period, the number of cases of these diseases dropped
gradually from 2,004 to 1,026. In 1996, 1,112 cases were
reported. The number of reported cases fell from 5,952 in
1992 to 2,146 in 1996.
Subclinical vitamin A deficiency affects 13% of the
population aged 13 years. The problem is most severe in
rural areas in the western and northern regions and in
several urban areas. There are no current data on the
prevalence of goiter due to iodine deficiency in
schoolchildren (in 1987 the rate was 8.8%); however, iodine
level studies conducted in 1995 in sentinel sites suggest
that it is not a major problem. Iron deficiency is prevalent
and in 1996 affected 30.2% of children aged 13; 0.5% of
these children were severely anemic. The problem occurs
throughout the country. Twenty-six percent of women of
childbearing age and 32% of pregnant women with deficient
levels of hemoglobin were found to be anemic.
The only available information on cardiovascular disease is
from hospital discharge and mortality records: discharge
rates per 100,000 population were 99.0 in 1993 (2,030
patients), 116.6 in 1994 (4,768 patients), and 126.3 in 1995
(6,189 patients); hospital mortality rates per 100,000
population were 11.7, 14.8, and 13.6, respectively, for the
same years. Women over the age of 50 made up the largest
proportion of patients with cardiovascular disease discharged
from hospitals. The largest proportion of deaths (38%) were
due to cerebrovascular diseases.
Of the 173,961 cytology exams carried out in 1995 in the
country as a whole (34.8% coverage of women aged 3059
years), 0.4% of the samples were found to be abnormal. Since
1990 there has been a cancer registry in the San Felipe
General Hospital (Tegucigalpa), which is the national cancer
referral center and the only hospital with a cobalt-60 unit.
In 1990 and 1995, 389 and 870 new cases of cancer were
treated, respectively. In 1994, 60% of the cases were uterine
cancer; 8% were breast cancer; 4% were cancer of trachea,
bronchus, and lung; 4% were skin cancer; and 3.6% were
stomach cancer. The hospital mortality from malignant
neoplasms was 60 per 100,000 population in 1993, 51 per
100,000 in 1994, and 43 per 100,000 in 1995. The principal
cancer sites are the digestive system, the genitourinary
system, the respiratory system, and bones and tissue.
The Public Security Force reports that the homicide rate
increased from 20.7 per 100,000 population in 1989 to 40.0
per 100,000 in 1995. Firearms were used in most homicides
(69.6%). The age at which criminal activities begin has
fallen (10 years).
Mortality from traffic accidents increased from 7.6 per 1,000
population in 1989 to 13.8 in 1994; the rate of domestic
violence was 65.5 per 100,000 population in 1996 when records
on this type of violence began to be kept. Crimes against
minors (between 1 and 18 years of age) reached a rate of 66.0
per 100,000 population in 1996. In that same year, the
reported incidence of rape was 3.0 per 100,000 women and 5.3
per 100,000 girls.
The age at which young people begin to use alcohol and
tobacco has dropped. A study on children and alcohol carried
out in eight marginal neighborhoods in the Tegucigalpa
metropolitan area in 1992 revealed that the age at which
alcohol was consumed for the first time ranges from 10 to 16
years. Forty-two percent of traffic accidents are associated
with alcohol consumption by the driver, and 61% of
occupational accidents (injuries and mutilations) occur among
workers who consumed excess alcohol the previous day.
In a study conducted by the Honduran Institute for the
Prevention of Alcoholism, Drug Addiction, and Drug Dependency
on the use of alcohol and drugs among students in
teachers schools in Honduras in 1996, four of every
five students reported that children and adolescents could
easily obtain alcohol in their neighborhoods or communities,
and approximately half the respondents (47%) reported the
same about tobacco. With regard to illegal drugs, fewer than
17% said that marijuana could be easily obtained in their
communities.
In 1993, tropical storms Bert and Gert affected 4,000
households, 30,000 people, and 2,000 km2 of agricultural land
in the northern region of Honduras. In November 1996 there
were floods due to heavy rainfall in the Chamelecón, Ulúa,
Luán, and Aguán river basins, which affected an estimated
80,840 people. Corn, beans, sorghum, rice, and banana crops
worth approximately US$ 7.7 million were also lost, and
several roads and about 10 bridges were damaged.
RESPONSE OF THE HEALTH SYSTEM
National Health Plans and Policies
Between 1994 and 1997 the Ministry of Public Health stepped
up the process of decentralizing functions to health areas
and to municipal government agencies. The Ministry also
enlisted other key players in the promotion of the process of
increasing access to health services as a fundamental aspect
of health reform.
The national access initiative, which seeks to address these
problems by extending service coverage and transforming the
countrys basic health institutionsunder the
leadership and regulation of the Ministry of Public
Healthencompasses three basic strategies: adaptation of
local health systems, with an emphasis on health areas;
social control of the management of health systems; and
development and improvement of human resources.
The Ministry of Public Health has promoted specific policies,
such as rapid extension of services through universal access
to basic health packages; coordination of international
cooperation; reorganization of the health system, with an
emphasis on the local levels; environmental and health
protection; health financing; food security; development of
institutional and community human resources; and shortages of
drugs and medical supplies.
Organization of the Health Sector
The health services are provided mainly by the Ministry of
Public Health, which functions as both a service provider and
a regulatory agency, the Honduran Social Security Institute,
and to a lesser extent, the Armed Forces Health System; the
National Social Welfare Agency; and the Department of
Occupational Medicine, Hygiene, and Safety within the
Ministry of Labor. The public health subsystem also oversees
the National Autonomous Water Supply and Sewerage Service
(SANAA). The private subsystem provides care to 10% of the
total population.
The services provided by the Ministry of Public Health are
organized in six levels of care, linked in a weak referral
system. The Ministry has organized nine health regions,
which, in turn, are divided into 41 health areas; this
division does not mirror the countrys
political-administrative division. In 1994 the
Ministrys network of services consisted of 978
establishments, including 28 hospitals, 214 physician-staffed
health centers, 727 rural health centers, and 9 maternal and
child clinics. Of the 28 hospitals, 6 are considered national
reference hospitals, 6 are regional hospitals, and 16 are
area hospitals.
The public subsector has 4,803 hospital beds, 4,141 of which
are in Ministry of Public Health establishments and 662 are
in IHSS establishments (a rate of 0.8 public-sector beds per
1,000 population). In 1995 the Ministry of Public Health
recorded 35.1 hospital discharges per 1,000 population, of
which 40% were patients admitted for childbirth. The private
subsector accounts for some 30% of all hospital discharges in
the country. The average occupancy rate in hospitals of the
Ministry of Public Health was 73%. In rural areas, the vast
majority of deliveries are attended by traditional birth
attendants. Agreements for shared services have been
established between the Medical-Surgical Hospital of the IHSS
and the national hospitals of the Ministry of Public Health
in the areas of psychiatry, ophthalmology, oncology,
nephrology, intensive care, and cardiology.
The current Health Code was approved in 1991. Through the Law
on Municipal Government (Decree No.134-40, October 1990)
progress has been made in decentralizing the health sector.
The General Law on the Environment, enacted in 1993 to
encourage environmental protection, established the Office of
the Environment, the National Environmental Advisory Board,
and the Technical Advisory Committee to support the Ministry
of the Environment and the Office of Environmental Law. The
Law on Modernization and Development of the Agricultural
Sector, enacted in 1992, regulates the registration of
agrochemical and biological products for agricultural or
veterinary use as a way to prevent environmental risks. In
1993, regulations were adopted on the sanitary control of
food sold in public places. In 1993 a procedural law was
adopted that provides special benefits for the elderly,
retirees, and pensioners, including discounts on recreational
activities, travel, hospitalization, and other services.
There is a health commission within the National Congress,
which is responsible for studying and issuing opinions on
proposed legislation to be submitted to the legislature for
approval; this commission also participates in the Central
American Parliament (PARLACEN) and the Latin American
Parliament (PARLATINO).
Between 7,000 and 9,000 drugs are marketed in Honduras. Of
these, the Ministry of Public Health has granted marketing
authorization for 5,071 products4,011 brand-name and
1,060 generic products. The drugs consumed in the country are
marketed through a network of distributors consisting of 115
wholesale dealers, 620 pharmacies, and 215 drug retail
outlets. The Ministry of Finance controls the price and
markup of imported drugs. The price of domestic
pharmaceutical products is not subject to any controls.
The Ministry of the Environment was created in 1993 to
oversee enforcement of the General Law on the Environment,
formulate policies, and coordinate actions with other
institutions. During 1996 the establishment of environmental
quality indices was initiated in 45 cities, with a view to
assessing and controlling various environmental risks through
low-cost technology.
Honduras has no programs for protecting food quality.
Regulations establish fortification of foods with
micronutrients (addition of vitamin A to sugar and iodine to
salt) and enrichment of wheat flour.
The Honduran Congress has drafted a new code on child health
and welfare, various laws aimed at controlling alcoholism and
drug addiction, a law creating an institute for childhood and
family issues and a special law on domestic violence. The
National Commission for the Protection of Human Rights also
has been strengthened, with special attention to provisions
relating to juvenile offenders, abused children, and battered
women. In June 1994 an agreement on support for child
protection activities was signed.
Health
services and resources
The Ministry of Public Health oversees various disease
prevention and control programs, among them the programs for
control of cancer, STDs and AIDS, rabies, vector-borne
diseases, tuberculosis, and leprosy.
The epidemiological surveillance system has maintained
coverage levels of under 60% for weekly national reporting of
diseases, although there are significant differences among
the various health regions of the country. The system
encompasses diseases under international surveillance
(cholera, plague, smallpox, yellow fever, influenza, and
malaria), as well as diseases under surveillance by the
national disease alert system and the Expanded Program on
Immunization: typhoid fever, dengue, meningitis, and
encephalitis. Most of the control programs have established
their own information systems, but they are not linked
together. Honduras participates in epidemiological monitoring
of diarrheal diseases, amebiasis, tuberculosis, rabies,
leishmaniasis, and AIDS.
The laboratory network is made up of 28 hospital
laboratories, 8 regional laboratories, and 1 central
reference laboratory.
Drinking water and sewerage are under control of the National
Drinking Water and Sewerage Commission (CONAPA), a
decentralized technical agency of the Ministry of Public
Health that has considerable operational and financial
independence. Some services are in the process of
decentralization, to transfer SANAA-operated systems to the
municipios.
The two principal service providers in the countrys two
major cities (SANAA in Tegucigalpa and the Municipal Water
Department in San Pedro Sula) suffer from relatively high
rates of water losses, lack of up-to-date records of users,
and lack of water meters. The rural systems constructed by
SANAA include an important community participation component,
and their management is delegated to administrative boards
made up of users.
The most common method of treating household solid waste is
open-air burning, which causes air pollution. Communities
with greater managerial capacity and larger populations
generally have systems for waste management, with a coverage
level that ranges from 20% to 50% in medium-sized communities
and from 50% to 80% in larger cities (Tegucigalpa and San
Pedro Sula).
Honduras has four food aid programs: the maternal and child
supplementary feeding program (PAMI), the program of food and
nutritional assistance for at-risk groups and promotion of
food production for personal consumption, the school lunch
program (PME), and the "food for work" program
(PAT). These programs were incorporated in 1995 as strategies
under the national food security plan. During the
19901993 period, PAMI served 220,907 people,
distributing food through 1,153 food and nutrition centers.
During the same period, PME served an annual average of
434,939 schoolchildren and in 19931994 covered nearly
50% of the public schools.
There are a total of 25 blood banks and transfusion services.
Of the six national hospitals, only three have blood banks
and transfusion services; regional and area hospitals have
their own blood banks. In the Ministry of Public Health, a
unit has been created to structure the organization and
operation of the blood bank network. This unit and the
network of blood banks are overseen by microbiologists. As of
1997 operation of the blood banks was not subject to
established technical standards and procedures.
The Ministry of Public Health provides dental services
through 34 local oral health clinics in schools and 84 health
centers and hospitals. There are four high-productivity
centers. The services provided are basically curative and the
vast majority are extractions. The ratio of 1.68 dentists per
10,000 population is insufficient to meet the oral health
care needs of the Honduran population.
Two national psychiatric hospitals are located in
Tegucigalpa. In San Pedro Sula, there is a psychiatric care
clinic that refers patients to one of the two hospitals in
Tegucigalpa. Each general hospital has two or three beds
available for psychiatric patients.
IHSS provides services to 14,680 pensioners and retirees
throughout the country. The Retirees and Pensioners Unit of
the IHSS offers seminars on preparing for retirement and
courses in handicrafts, and it provides support for project
management. There are two homes for the elderly, which are
financed by voluntary contributions and offer basic inpatient
services.
The total supply of drugs in the Honduran pharmaceuticals
market during the 19921995 period increased 26%.
Imported drugs account for a high percentage of the national
market (54.8% in 1990 and 60.7% in 1994) and represented 23
% of Honduras total imports in the period 19931995;
their value rose from US$ 24 million in 1990 to US$ 40
million in 1996. The public sector (Ministry of Public Health
and IHSS) accounted for 27.2% of the total supply of drugs on
the market in 1993 and 29.0% in 1994. The Ministry of Public
Health accounted for 24.8% of the total in the network of
services in 1994, and the IHSS 4.2%.
On average, there are 6.5 physicians per 10,000 population
(33% in the public sector); 2.4 professional nurses (48% in
the public sector); 8.4 auxiliary nurses (87% in the public
sector), and 0.2 dentists (18% in the public sector). There
are insufficient numbers of human resources in the public
sector for the majority of the professions. The situation is
exacerbated by the unequal geographical distribution of
resources; in some communities in the country, the job market
for health personnel is saturated, whereas in
othersgenerally those that are most
inaccessiblemany positions are vacant. The public
sector, including IHSS, employs 69% of all health workers in
the country.
The education of health professionals is the responsibility
of the National Autonomous University of Honduras (UNAH). In
the period 19921996, an average of 272 physicians, 19
nurses, and 41 dentists were graduated each year. The
education of auxiliary and mid-level technicians is the
responsibility of educational establishments administered by
the Division of Human Resources of the Ministry of Public
Health. In 1990, several new categories of health workers
were recognized: environmental health technician, teacher in
public health, and nurse specialist in maternal and perinatal
health.
There is little applied research in health and most studies
are conducted by the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID), the Japanese International Cooperation
Agency (JICA), PAHO/WHO, the World Bank, and the Governments
of the United Kingdom and Sweden.
Health expenditures, as a proportion of GDP, increased from
2.7% in 1990 to 3.0% in 1995 and, as a proportion of total
public spending, health expenditure has shown an erratic
pattern: from 8.1% in 1990 to 6% in 1993 and to 9.2% in 1995.
Similar fluctuations were observed in health spending as a
percentage of total central government expenditures (10.4% in
1990, 9.0% in 1993, 13.4% in 1995). Health expenditure per
capita increased from US$ 18.9 in 1990 to US$ 21.5 in 1995.
Current spending decreased from 70.9% in 1990 to 61.4% in
1995; the greatest decline occurred in the category of
compensation (40.5% in 1990 and 31.0% in 1995), and the
category of goods and services expenditures increased more
than the inflation rate. Capital spending has increased
significantly: from US$ 26.0 million in 1990 to US$ 41.2
million in 1995, representing 29.1% in 1990 to 38.6% in 1995.
Hospital service expenditures dropped from 40.1% in 1990 to
28.5% in 1995, while the share of spending on the
communicable disease control program increased from 18.9% in
1990 to 22.4% in 1995.
Of the total resources available for the health sector during
the period 19901995, 78% were public funds and 22
% foreign. Bilateral cooperation accounts for 53.3% of
international cooperation for health, and the United States
is the largest donor (45.2%); however, since 1990 there has
been a decline in the amount of bilateral assistance, which
has been replaced by cooperation from agencies of the United
Nations system and financial institutions such as the
Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank. In 1992,
the three largest bilateral donors were the United States
(US$ 38.4 million), Italy (US$ 37.4 million), and Japan (US$
19.4 million).
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