哥斯达黎加的社会经济发展、保健干预和死亡率下降。

L Rosero-Bixby
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摘要

哥斯达黎加到1985年的预期寿命为74岁,其健康水平与发达国家相当。我国在卫生方面取得的成就是政治和社会经济环境以及正确的公共卫生政策的产物。直到大约1970年,哥斯达黎加的死亡率特征虽然略好于拉丁美洲的平均水平,但其演变方式与该区域其他国家相似。特别是在20世纪40年代和50年代的几十年里,主要由于进口了低成本、高效的卫生技术,预期寿命显著提高。然而,在1970年代,哥斯达黎加摆脱了区域停滞的模式,并设法缩小了与发达国家在死亡率方面的差距。在这十年中,婴儿死亡率从千分之六十急剧下降到千分之十九。这一突破的主要决定因素是卫生干预措施,特别是初级卫生保健方案,尽管有利的社会经济条件和生育率下降也发挥了作用。生态数据和其他证据表明,高达四分之三的死亡率下降归因于当代公共卫生服务的改善,其中约40%归因于初级卫生保健干预措施。此外,通过针对弱势群体的干预措施,这些干预措施具有减少儿童死亡率的地域和社会经济差异的优点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Socioeconomic development, health interventions and mortality decline in Costa Rica.

Costa Rica, whose life expectancy was 74 years by 1985, has reached a health level comparable to a developed country. The health achievements of this country are product of political and socioeconomic circumstances as well as of right public health policies. Until about 1970 the features of Costa Rica mortality, although somewhat better than the Latin American average, evolved in a similar way to the rest of the region. In particular, the decades of 1940s and 1950s saw dramatic improvements in life expectancy, thanks mainly to the import of low-cost, high-effectiveness health technologies. In the 1970s, however, Costa Rica departed from a regional pattern of stagnation and managed to close the gap with developed countries in terms of mortality levels. A dramatic decline in the infant mortality rate from 60 to 19 per 1,000 took place in this decade. The main determinants of this breakthrough were health interventions, notably a primary health care program, even though favorable socioeconomic conditions and a reduced fertility also played a role. Ecological data and other evidence suggest that up to three fourths of the mortality decline was accounted for contemporary improvements in public health services, with about 40 percent attributable to primary health care interventions. Furthermore, by targeting interventions on the less privileged population, these interventions had the merit of reducing geographic and socioeconomic differentials in child mortality.

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