[Our new fragile world doesn't consist of developed and developing countries only]

Autor: H, Rosling
Rok vydání: 1993
Předmět:
Zdroj: Lakartidningen. 90(46)
ISSN: 0023-7205
Popis: Health conditions have improved worldwide; therefore, the division into developed and developing countries no longer holds true. International organizations tend to divide countries into three groups. An increasing number of people are born in middle income countries where health conditions continue to improve. However, in a number of the least developed countries, mortality is on the rise in a spiral of economic stagnation, environmental problems, social misery, and ethnic/civil conflicts. This requires the medical assistance of international agencies from abroad. Since the 1960s there has been a drastic decline of child mortality in developing countries, especially in Asia. 1 billion people live in countries with child mortality under 20/1000, almost 3 billion live in countries with child mortality ranging 20-100/1000, and over 1 billion live in the least developed countries with child mortality over 100/1000. Unicef divides countries into developed, developing, and least developed countries, while the World Bank groups them as high-, medium-, and low-income countries. Thailand's child mortality is the same as that of Russia, while Cuba has a lower rate than Washington, D.C. On the other hand, Singapore is a developed high-income country with one of the world's healthiest populations. Stagnation and conflicts in the former socialist countries mean that many Asian and Latin American countries have better health status than some parts of Europe. Despite Africa's high mortality, its population growth is the highest in the world: in 20 years its population has doubled. Economic stagnation and the debt burden in many of these countries has resulted in ethnic conflicts and the collapse of social institutions: Somalia, southern Sudan, Rwanda, Liberia, Angola, perhaps Zaire, and Mozambique. The organization Physicians Beyond Borders is an example of extending humanitarian help and combatting social collapse in the least developed countries.
Databáze: OpenAIRE