Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09MONTEVIDEO107
2009-02-20 16:56:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Montevideo
Cable title:  

CHRONIC DISEASES INCREASING IN URUGUAY

Tags:  SOCI TBIO KPAO WHO UY 
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UNCLAS MONTEVIDEO 000107 

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WHA/BSC FOR MDASCHBACH
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E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SOCI TBIO KPAO WHO UY
SUBJECT: CHRONIC DISEASES INCREASING IN URUGUAY

REF: STATE 002172

UNCLAS MONTEVIDEO 000107

SIPDIS

WHA/BSC FOR MDASCHBACH
OES/IHB FOR LISA MILLER

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SOCI TBIO KPAO WHO UY
SUBJECT: CHRONIC DISEASES INCREASING IN URUGUAY

REF: STATE 002172


1. SUMMARY: In response to reftel, post prepared the following
report to examine the impact of chronic diseases (or
Non-Communicable Diseases, NCDs) in Uruguay and to inform the
Department about policy related developments and the capacity of the
local health sector to address those diseases. Uruguay exhibits
characteristics of a developed country, with its aging population
and increasing percentage of deaths caused by chronic diseases, but
its antiquated health care system impedes it from reacting to the
changing needs of its citizens. With over 90 percent of the
Ministry of Public Health's budget dedicated to health care
services, programs in prevention and health care promotion are
severely lacking. Still, Uruguay is a leader in cancer research,
and is currently working to reform the system to better respond to
the evolving needs of the population. End Summary.

Background
--------------


2. Uruguay is a middle-income country with a population of
approximately 3.33 million. Throughout most of the second half of
the 20th century, Uruguay boasted high health status indicators
compared to other developing countries. Today, according to GOU
data, average life expectancy at birth is 76 years, the infant
mortality rate is 13.34 per 1,000 live births, 99 percent of births
are delivered in a hospital or clinic, and 98 percent of the
population has access to an potable water. While it remains among
the top-ranked countries of the Latin American and the Caribbean
(LAC) region in the UNDP Human Development Report, Uruguay's
relative position has slipped in the past few years from a ranking
of 40 in 2000 to a ranking of 47 in 2007.

Uruguay: An Aging Population with an Unhealthy Lifestyle
-------------- --------------


3. Uruguay's demographic structure has changed over the last
decades. With 13.5 percent of the population being older than 65
and 54 percent of the population over 31 years of age, while only 23
percent are younger than 15, Uruguay has become the 'oldest' country
in the Western Hemisphere. The estimated median age was 32.8 years
in June 2008, putting it in line with almost every developed nation
in the world. Population growth is almost flat. Several factors
have contributed to the aging of Uruguay's population, including

decreasing fertility and mortality rates, as well as a strong
emigration flow during the last decades.


4. Concomitantly, Uruguay's epidemiological profile has completed
its transition from infectious diseases to NCDs. The burden of
disease has changed mainly due to the aging of the population,
unhealthy lifestyles, risky behavior, and changes in the social and
economic environment. Chronic illnesses are now the main health
problem in Uruguay, currently claiming more deaths than infectious
diseases.

Health Sector Reform to Address NCDs
--------------


5. While Uruguay allocates a large portion of its income to the
social sectors, the bulk of the social spending is concentrated in
social security and health, largely driven by the aging of the
Uruguayan population. Consolidated (private and public) health
related expenditures were estimated at 8.1 percent of the country's
GDP for 2005, according to the WHO. The high level of health
expenditures is due to several factors including: technological
change, an exceedingly complex institutional structure with
overlapping responsibilities and inadequate incentives for
efficiency, a highly regulated physician labor market that
undermines the ability of health organizations to control their
personnel costs, and a delivery system that is not well matched to
the health needs of the population.


6. The examination of the allocation of the Ministry of Public
Health's (MPH) budgetary resources points to the insufficient
allocation of resources for health care prevention and promotion.
Most resources are allocated to health care services (93.6 percent
of the 2006 health budget). The remaining resources are absorbed by
administrative costs (6.2 percent) with only a negligible amount
being assigned to health promotion and preventive care (0.2
percent). In the medium and long term, the insufficient attention
given to health prevention results in an increase in high-cost
treatments for a large proportion of patients, thus generating
additional health costs and consequences that could have otherwise
been avoided.


7. Until now, health reform initiatives in Uruguay had concentrated
on financial and design problems. Efforts were never focused on
improving the health system's response to the areas where the
disease burden was highest. As a consequence, the Ministry of
Public Health (MPH) does not have a complete set of the basic tools
to address NCDs effectively, including appropriate information
systems, epidemiological surveillance and monitoring systems, and a
health promotion and prevention policy.


8. The Vazquez Administration, with financial assistance from the
World Bank (a USD 25.2 million Specific Investment Loan),is
currently implementing a major health care system reform, the pillar
of which has been the creation of an Integrated National Health
System (INHS). Such a system was designed to identify a basic
package of comprehensive health services to be provided by public
and private health care providers alike. An important component of
the health reform focuses on strengthening the MPH's ability to
carry out the essential public health functions: regulation and
stewardship, health promotion and prevention, and epidemiological
surveillance and monitoring.

The Prevalence of NCDs in Uruguay
--------------


9. In Uruguay, 100 percent of deaths are recorded, and all death
certificates are completed by a physician. According to the latest
(2004) GOU figures, almost 32,000 people died in the country in

2002. NCDs were responsible for an estimated 80 percent of those
deaths. The major NCDs affecting the Uruguayans were cardiovascular
diseases (32.8 percent of all deaths),cancer (24.4 percent),
chronic respiratory diseases (3.5 percent),and diabetes mellitus
(2.1 percent). In fact, Uruguay has already reached the level of
NCDs projected by the WHO for Latin America in 2020.


10. In 2006, Uruguay's MPH conducted a national survey aimed at
identifying the main risk factors that lead to NCDs in Uruguay. The
study focused on four behavioral risk factors (tobacco consumption,
over consumption of alcohol, unhealthy diet habits, and lack of
physical activity) as well as four biological risk factors
(overweight, high blood pressure, high blood sugar level, and
abnormal blood lipids level).


11. The survey found that many Uruguayan smoke regularly, are
relatively inactive, are overweight, have high blood pressure and
high cholesterol, and most do not eat as many fruits and vegetables
as they should. Only 1% of Uruguayans were found to have low risk
of NCDs. Thirty eight percent of the adults 25-44 years old present
an elevated risk (at least three risk factors). Adults 45-64 years
old present an elevated risk also (63 percent). In other words,
while any Uruguayan strategy to combat NCDs should have as its
immediate, highest priority the middle-aged segment of the
population, the young adults segment also demands urgent attention.

Addressing the Impact of NCDs
--------------


12. The Government has already begun to implement several outreach
and health care programs to improve coverage of NCDs in public
hospitals, including programs for: diabetes, hypertension, and
cervical and breast cancer prevention.


13. New initiatives are also being implemented as a result of
international cooperation. For example, Uruguay had no chronic
disease surveillance capacity in the past. In 2002 Uruguay sent a
team of physicians to be trained at the CDC in Atlanta. Upon their
return, an Epidemiology Surveillance Unit was established. The Unit
is in the process of designing a national chronic disease
surveillance system for Uruguay.


14. Also, Uruguay has been selected to take part in NCI's Office of
Latin American Cancer Program Development's pilot initiative to
advance relevant cancer research and training programs. Uruguay's
selection to participate is notable given the size of the other
participation countries: Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and Chile. Its
participation will elevate Uruguay's visibility as a country capable
of cutting edge technology.


15. The GOU has also taken regulatory measures to prevent harm from
tobacco through the legislative approval and implementation of "The
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)." Uruguay became the
first country in Latin America to pass anti-smoking legislation,
perhaps an unsurprising step considering that President Vazquez is a
practicing oncologist. Prior to the law's implementation, GOU data
indicated that smoking was causing 5,500 tobacco-related deaths a
year. "Passive smoking is also linked to chronic disease and
premature deaths. Since there's not a secure level of exposure, the
best thing to do is to ban cigarettes in enclosed places," argued
Vazquez. To help promote his smoke-free plan, the president launched
a campaign called "A Million Thanks," which is a reference to the
number of Uruguayan smokers (31 percent of the population).

A Long Road Ahead
--------------


16. Despite the changes in its epidemiological profile and the
higher prevalence of NCDs, Uruguay's health system has made only a
few adaptative changes. The health care system is still organized
to attend acute illnesses rather than chronic illness. The World
Bank estimates that 22 percent of all deaths and 32 percent of the
deaths among those younger than 65 years old are avoidable.


17. As a result of limited health promotion activities, general
knowledge about NCDs is relatively low, particularly among
low-income population groups. The intensive use of basic public
health tools to address NCDs could render rapid improvements in
health status. Massive public health campaigns aimed at promoting
healthy lifestyles and the early detection of high-risk diseases
such as diabetes, hypertension and high cholesterol could have a
considerable impact on reducing health care costs and increasing the
quality of life of many Uruguayans. Support for prevention measures
is likely to be broad, as the population views an increased focus on
promotion and prevention as positive.

MATTHEWMAN