The Healthcare System in Mozambique has adopted various policies over the years in accordance with fluctuations in the health status of the population. Mozambique has experienced civic conflict, natural disasters, and more – all of which have contributed to the health challenges that the country has faced historically and in present day. One staunch divider of Mozambican history is the
Civil War, which raged from 1975 to 1992. This period in history is also useful in defining periods of change in the country's health care administration. Very little research on the subject of health in pre-colonial Mozambique exists today. However, according to historian
Mario Azevedo, it has been agreed upon by experts in the field that collective national initiatives in health were not seen in Mozambique prior to the
arrival of the Portuguese. Shortly after
Vasco de Gama set foot on East African soil in the 15th century, colonization of the country began alongside Catholic intervention.
Post Civil War When the
Mozambican civil war concluded in 1992, the country began making progress towards recovery through domestic and international aid initiatives. One of the most notable international aid interventions was the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, sponsored by the
International Monetary Fund and
World Bank. In 1996, this initiative began helping governments reduce the debt they were incurring through public health spending, effectively encouraging them to promote these healthy initiatives in their countries. With the aid of this initiative, federal expenditure on health care was able to increase from US$4.6 billion in 1997, to US$7.5 billion in 2002. The funds that governments saved with the help of the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative was left in the hands of
poverty-reduction strategy papers (PRSP), whose primary responsibility was to ensure access of the poor to social resources - like health care - food security, and government transparency. In
Mozambique, two specific initiatives the PRSP pushed were (1) increasing community knowledge surrounding health challenges, diseases, and resources; and (2) preventing and slowing the spread of sexually transmitted diseases around the country through public health campaigns that increased public knowledge about modes of transmission and personal protection against
STDs. See also
Health in Mozambique ==Hospitals==