Go To or NEXT or PREVIOUS or ITEM LIST or TABLE OF
CONTENTS
FORWARDBACKNEW SEARCH

Library of Congress Country Studies

Do NOT bookmark these search results.

Search results are stored in a TEMPORARY file for display purposes.
The temporary file will be purged from our system in a few hours.

Section 1 of 1

Belarus

Health

[JPEG]

Doctors operating at a specialized medical institute, Minsk
Courtesy Anatol Klashchuk

Belarus's health care system is in poor shape and fails to meet the needs of the population, as is common for the former republics of the Soviet Union. The communist era's neglect of this sphere, poorly trained staff, and substandard technology have resulted in a system in which basic medical services are sorely lacking, contributing to the poor health of the population. The added strains of caring for victims of the Chornobyl' accident have overwhelmed the system. In 1994 there were 127 hospital beds and forty-two doctors per 10,000 inhabitants. The country had 131,000 hospital beds at 868 hospitals. The most common causes of death were cardiovascular disease, cancer, accidents, and respiratory disease.

The Republic Center on AIDS was created in 1990 to coordinate all activities for prevention of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and control of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). There is mandatory HIV testing of all hospital inpatients and extensive testing of high-risk populations, such as homosexuals, prostitutes, and prisoners. By the end of 1991, seventy cases of HIV-positive individuals were identified, forty of whom were foreigners. However, because HIV testing kits (as well as other medical supplies) had been supplied by Moscow before the breakup of the Soviet Union, there was doubt as to whether testing could continue at the same level.

Data as of June 1995


Do NOT bookmark these search results.

Search results are stored in a TEMPORARY file for display purposes.
The temporary file will be purged from our system in a few hours.