.
Vaccinations The crumbling, poorly financed healthcare system and rumours that children have fallen ill or even died after being immunised have led to a very poor vaccination rate. In August 2016, 30% of children in Ukraine were fully immunized against
measles, 11%, against
hepatitis B, and 3% of against
diphtheria,
pertussis and
tetanus. At the time Ukraine had the lowest routine immunization rate in the world.
High blood pressure and obesity According to a study, entitled "Main reasons for the high death rate in Ukraine" conducted by the
World Bank and released in December 2010 every third Ukrainian aged 18–65, including every fifth aged 18–25, had a high blood pressure. Almost 29% of the respondents suffered from being overweight, and 20% suffered from obesity.
Smoking According to the above-mentioned 2010 World Bank study 36% (28.6% is the average in
Europe) of Ukrainians smoke tobacco, including 31% of those who smoke every day. Men with primary education and women with higher education are inclined to smoking. Some 80% of daily smokers are men. The average age that daily smokers start the habit is decreasing, and at present is 16 years. In the younger age group there are four times as many smokers as in the older age group. The smallest percentage of smokers is to be found in the west of the country (24.6%), while the largest is in the east (34%).
Disability 2.7 million people in Ukraine (6%) were reported as having a
disability in 2014. This number did not include the (reportedly) 1.5% of people with temporary disabilities. For example, in the capital
Kyiv only 4% of infrastructure is considered to be "disability friendly". The number of HIV/AIDS cases in Ukraine reduced by 200 or 3.9% to 4,900 in the period of January–November 2008, compared with the corresponding period of last year. Ukraine has one of the highest rates of increase of HIV/AIDS cases in
Eastern Europe.
Mental health A 2017 article in
The Independent reports that due to its mainly macho,
patriarchal culture there is great resistance to
psychotherapy in Ukraine. Weak mechanisms for licensing effective counsellors aggravates this resistance and a shame fostered by the years Ukraine was part of the
Soviet Union compounds the problem, owing to
Soviet authorities rendering psychiatry a tool for punishment (by imprisoning political dissidents in asylums) demonised mental health issues further. == Mortality ==