Survey: 60% of Russian children
unhealthy
Monday, 16 December, 2002, 16:58 GMT
More than half the children in Russia are in poor physical or
psychological health, a government survey has revealed. The results of the survey of 30 million children by the Russian
Ministry of Health will add to fears of a looming demographic crisis in the
country. Russia's epidemic of ill-health and falling life expectancies
have received much international attention over recent years, but the health
problems suffered by its children are much less well-known. The results of the first stage of the nationwide survey showed that 60 per cent were unhealthy.
Mortality rates The most common conditions were problems of the digestive and
motor systems, often coupled with behavioural difficulties and nervous
disorders. Russia's top medical experts say the report merely confirms their
suspicion that ill-health is afflicting ever-younger sections of the population.
They are developing a plan of emergency measures to boost
children's health but say the health problems experienced by Russian women are
one of the central reasons for the huge numbers of unhealthy children. Official statistics show that half the country's expectant
mothers are under-nourished. Two-thirds of Russian babies are subsequently born unhealthy and
infant mortality rates in the poorest areas of Russia are higher than in many
parts of the developing world. Health problems begin at birth and appear to get gradually worse.
By the age of 18, when military service beckons, half of Russia's
young men are rejected because they are unhealthy. The country's doctors say that improvements might take years or
decades to come, leading Russian demographers to warn that the growing
generation might be just as unhealthy as the troubled children of today's
Russia. |