J Korean Med Assoc.  2013 May;56(5):368-374.

Current status of healthcare and effective health aid strategies in North Korea

Affiliations
  • 1Center for Medicine and Korean Reunification, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. smpark.snuh@gmail.com
  • 2Department of Family Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

As the period since the partition of North and South Korea has been prolonged, the gap between the two Koreas continues to widen in various ways. Indeed, in the health sector, differences that already existed have diverged even more after North Korea's economic crisis. This article will focus on the problematic situation of North Korean health care status and the trends in health aid to North Korea toward future improvement. Since 1990, after the dismantling of the socialist state system and a series of natural disasters, North Korea has accepted partial transformation to free market principles. Along with these changes and due to decreased rations, health workers also began seeking a secondary income to meet their daily needs, and a secondary economy in the pharmaceutical industry became one of their main financial resources. This has led to inequity in health service accessibility and has resulted in changes in North Korean patients' health behaviors. Meanwhile, external aid for health has steadily increased, resulting in dependency on external support. Infectious disease and maternal, neonatal, and child health-related aid support has comprised the largest portion in health aid; however, the changing composition of the disease burden is requiring different allocation and partnerships aligned according to health aid needs. North Korea requires health-related policy reforms that can respond actively to the lack of health resources, the deteriorated health infrastructure, and the instability of the health and social safety net. The South Korean government, as the central coordinator of such aid, should play this role with a specific strategy to support and respond to the changing needs of the North Korean people.

Keyword

Democratic People's Republic of Korea; Health care sector; Financial support

MeSH Terms

Child
Communicable Diseases
Delivery of Health Care
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Dependency (Psychology)
Disasters
Drug Industry
Financial Support
Health Behavior
Health Care Sector
Health Resources
Health Services
Humans
Korea
Republic of Korea

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