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Egypt's ailing health care system

After some 30 years of governmental neglect, the Egyptian health care system is riddled with unsafe practices and a lack of personnel and facilities.

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An injured civilian is seen at a hospital near the site of a bomb attack in front of the Cairo Security Directorate building, which includes police and state security, in downtown Cairo, Jan. 24, 2014. — REUTERS/Al Youm Al Saabi Newspaper

“What you see in Egypt is typical of a health system that has been neglected by the government,” said Henk Bekedam, the World Health Organization's (WHO) representative in Egypt. “And this is not since yesterday or since the revolution. This has been happening for the last 20 or 30 years.” The Egyptian government plays a marginal role in the country’s public health care system despite Egypt having the highest prevalence of hepatitis C (14.7% of the population), high rates of obesity and hypertension (17.6% of the adult population) and endemic poverty.

The health care system recently came under scrutiny after images of run-down government hospitals went viral following visits by Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab to two government-run hospitals June 6. The events spurred doctors to share photos revealing the alarming conditions in hospitals throughout the country. Among the images were clogged squat toilets, warnings about poisoned water, cats wandering the halls, animal droppings on hospital paperwork and bloody bandages on the floor.

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