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Healthcare in Libya

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Title: Healthcare in Libya


1
Healthcare in Libya
Association of British Healthcare Industries
Export Club Focus on the Middle East
Feride Alp Membership and Marketing Manager The
Middle East Association info_at_the-mea.co.uk www.the
-mea.co.uk 24 May 2007
2
About the MEA
  • Non-profit making organisation set up in 1961 to
    promote trade and investment between the UK and
    the Middle East - which includes Iran and Turkey
    and, latterly, Afghanistan. Works in close
    co-operation with UKTI and the FCO.
  • Members number about 350 UK-based companies and
    50 overseas (corporate and individual),
    representing manufacturing and service
    industries, from the very large to the very
    small oil majors, aerospace, banks, law firms,
    manufacturers, traders, consultants and so on.
  • The Association organises up to seventy events a
    year in-house which include a monthly At Home
    country seminars briefing meetings and
    subscription luncheons for visiting British
    Ambassadors and senior British Government
    ministers/officials.
  • Overseas activities include sponsoring and
    leading trade missions, and sponsoring British
    pavilions at important international exhibitions.
  • Only organisation of its kind in the UK which is
    dedicated exclusively to the promotion of trade
    and good will between Britain, the Middle East,
    North Africa, Turkey and Iran. Its varied
    membership and range of activities throughout the
    year make it a unique and valuable forum for
    networking at all levels.

3
Libya key facts
  • Head of State Muammar Al-Qadhafi
  • Head of Government Dr Shukri Mohamed Ghanem
  • Population 5.5 million
  • Currency Libyan Dinar (approx. 1 LYD 2,58)
  • GDP per capita circa US3,500
  • Major industries oil, gas, cement, textiles,
    food processing
  • Main import sources Italy, Germany, UK, Frandce,
    Turkey
  • Main export markets Italy, Germany, France,
    Spain
  • Opportunity sectors healthcare, education,
    tourism, infrastructure, transport, oil and gas.

4
Service quality
  • Poor in primary healthcare due to low staff
    motivation, training and lack of equipment
  • Poor motivation due to salary restrictions
  • Lack of Libyan doctors in rural areas
  • Lack of nurses due to low pay
  • Poor quality nursing education
  • Lack of specialist doctors in key areas
  • Lack of basic medical equipment
  • Shortage of qualified technicians to maintain and
    repair equipment
  • Low level of computerisation
  • Lack of family doctor system
  • Libyans opting to purchase private medical care

5
Allocation of resources
  • Decentralisation giving power to the 33 Shahabiya
    who have their own budgets
  • Central health authorities powerless to monitor
    spending requirements
  • Lack of centrally-determined policy guidelines
    and organised information systems
  • Shortage of other health workers, such as
    pharmacists, medical technicians and trained
    paramedics
  • Too many medical students being trained 15,000,
    compared to 9,000 practising doctors for a
    population of 6 million.
  • 13 doctors, 48 nurses, 34 hospital beds per
    10,000 people
  • 420 out-patient clinics and 60 in-patient clinics
  • 1,084-bed capacity
  • Average spending per year per household 100.

6
Environmental and behavioural risk factors
  • Four main behavioural risk factors
  • Smoking
  • Diet
  • Physical inactivity
  • High blood pressure
  • Therefore, increased in non-communicable diseases
    such as
  • Cancer
  • Diabetes
  • Cardiovascular diseases
  • Chronic respiratory diseases
  • Environmental risk factors
  • Poor road safety
  • Poor water quality
  • Growing TB and AIDS danger

7
Changes to commercial and investment laws
  • Law 5 passed in 2006 to attract investment of
    foreign capital
  • Minimum investment capital US1.5 million, with
    50-50 partnership.
  • Foreign ownership of Libyan companies 65
    foreign shareholding, with a minimum of
    US770,000, a third of which must be fully
    paid-up upon incorporation, with the remainder
    being paid within 5 years of incorporation.
  • Right to transfer dividends for investment
    projects
  • Exemption from tax on some products
  • Exemption from income tax for five years
  • Law 443 a Libyan agent is required if you are
    not an investor in Libya
  • It takes one month to 45 days to set up a company
    in Libya
  • Arbitration not a signatory of the international
    arbitration conventions

8
Healthcare in Libya
Association of British Healthcare Industries
Export Club Focus on the Middle East
Feride Alp Membership and Marketing Manager The
Middle East Association info_at_the-mea.co.uk www.the
-mea.co.uk 24 May 2007
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