Understanding Russia's Regional Health Markets

06-Aug-2012 | News-Press Release

A forensic analysis with statistics on national and regional health infrastructure and provision. An essential source of highly detailed business data. http://www.bharatbook.com/medical-devices-market-research-reports/understanding-russias-regional-health-markets.html

Russia is a nation of huge economic contrasts. The country has generated a great deal of mineral wealth yet spends a comparatively small amount of GDP on health, at 5.6% in 2010. The Russian health system, in the main, remains outmoded and undercapitalized. But things are changing.

Any assessment of Russia must consider the recent improvements, ambitious plans and the challenges that are influencing the development of the health market and answer key questions such as:

How is the population and wealth regionally distributed?
Which provinces produce the highest levels of GDP?
To what degree does Moscow skew analysis of Russia’s financial and health infrastructure?
What is the primary and secondary health infrastructure in each region?
How is healthcare delivered?
What is the changing role played by private health provision?
Which regions are better provided for and which still need investment?

Identifying opportunities in Russia’s expanding health economy requires detailed knowledge of the economic performance and health infrastructure at a regional level. Being able to see that in the context of the neighbouring districts/regions as well as the national picture, brings focus to areas of opportunity and need.

Rich in statistics, charts and maps, this new 354-page report from Espicom Understanding Russia's Regional Health Markets takes you further into understanding the national and regional health environments.

Snapshots on the Russian health market
The Russian Federation is the largest country in the world, with a land area of over 17 million square kilometres, encompassing eleven time zones. After the breakup of the USSR in 1991, the Russian Federation retained over 75% of the USSR's total land area and 51% of its population.
The population of Russia was estimated at 142.9 million in 2010, an increase of 0.71% over 2009. Prior to 2010 growth rate remained negative, decreasing by an average of 0.4% each year since 1999.
Non-communicable diseases that are related to unhealthy lifestyles remain a major problem in Russia. Over 9 million deaths could be avoided each year. Often the risk factors lie with smoking, alcohol abuse, the use of saturated fat and excessive salt intake.
Smoking is a major cause of ill health. There were 54.2 million cases of respiratory disease (24.0% of the total) and 32.4 million cases of circulatory disease (14.3%). Unsurprisingly, the leading site for new cancer cases in males was the trachea, bronchus & lung, with 46,400 cases, or 19.5% of the total.
Russia spent 5.6% of GDP on healthcare in 2010, equal to US$82.4 billion, or US$581 per capita. Just over 62% of this was in the public sector, worth US$51.1 billion or US$361 per capita. The government intends to gradually increase public healthcare spending to 6-7% of GDP as part of its ambitious plans to improve the health of the Russian people.

A TALE OF TWO REGIONS – UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE OF WEALTH AND HEALTH DISTRIBUTION

Moscow City and Ivanovo are both located in the Central Federal District, yet they show markedly different economic and health profiles.

Indicator
GRP Per Capita
Health/Social Expenditure per capita Medical Insurance Per Capita
Death rate per ‘000
Average beds per hospital
Doctors rate per ‘000

Moscow City
US$21,457
US$665
US$265
10.9
465
8.5

Ivanovo
US$2,540
US$193
US$90.5
18.4
190
5.0

For more information kindly visit :
Understanding Russia's Regional Health Markets

Or

Bharat Book Bureau
Tel: +91 22 27810772 / 27810773
Fax: + 91 22 27812290
Email: info@bharatbook.com
Website: www.bharatbook.com
Follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/Sandhya3B
http://in.linkedin.com/pub/bharat-book/3a/98/512
http://healthcareraj.blogspot.com/

Show HTML Embed Snippet

This release was submitted by a PRSafe user.
Any communication related to the content of this release should be sent to the release submitter.

Contact Info

From Name
From Email
From Company
Message
Login to Submit Email

Author Info

Tag Cloud

Categories

More Releases

Comments

Add a Comment

    \n\