Health and Social Care >>>>>>>>>> Your Ads on Libya Trader

 

A government advertisement appearing in an international publication in 1977 asserted that the Libyan social security legislation of 1973 ranked among the most comprehensive in the world and that it protected all citizens from many hazards associated with employment.

The social security program instituted in 1957 had already provided protection superior to that available in many or most developing countries, and in the 1980s the welfare available to Libyans included much more than was provided under the social security law: work injury and sickness compensation and disability, retirement, and survivors' pensions. Workers employed by foreign firms were entitled to the same social security benefits as workers employed by Libyan citizens.

Subsidized food, inexpensive housing, free medical care and education, and profit-sharing were among the benefits that eased the lives of all citizens. The government protected the employed in their jobs and subsidized the underemployed and unemployed. In addition, there were nurseries to care for the children of working mothers, orphanages for homeless children, and homes for the aged.

The welfare programs had reached even the oasis towns of the desert, where they reportedly were received with considerable satisfaction. The giving of alms to the poor remained one of the pillars of the Islamic faith, but the extent of public welfare was such that there was increasingly less place for private welfare. Nonetheless, the traditional Arab sense of family responsibility remained strong, and provision for needy relatives was still a common practice. kkk

 

Saint James Hospital

Health status and demographics

  • Libya has a small population in a large land area1. The total estimated population at mid year of 2006 was 5,323,991. With a geographic area of 1,775,500 square kilometers, it makes one of the lowest population density rates in the world, at 2.9 persons per km2.
    About 85% of the population is urban, mostly concentrated in the two largest cities, Tripoli and Benghazi. 32 % of the population is estimated to be under age 15.
    The average population growth rate is was 3.1% a year between 1975 and 1999. In 2006 it reduced to 1.8%. The Libyan Arab Jamahiriya is witnessing an increase in the adolescent age group with 25% of the population between 10 and 19 years old in 2000 according to the World Population Prospects database of the United Nations. As a result ,the country’s population is fairly young, and the proportion of Libyans over the age of 65 is low even by regional standards, at about 3.4% in 2000 according to the Human Development Report 2002 of the UNDP.

  • Secretariat of Health and Environment
  • Ads in Libya