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1. Nuclear Medicine in Indonesia
2. Indonesia
3. Health care facilities:No of doctors : 15/100,000 populationPayments for health care: Health Insurance : 6.2 % Government : 7.8 % Individual (fee for service)Primary health care : 7,243Hospital : Government : 522 Private : 351No of bed : 120.000Super-specialty hospitals providing tertiary health care : 54
4. No. of medical colleges: University : 52 state and 100 private School of Medicine and teaching hospital : 18 state and 17 private Post-graduate medical education in nuclear medicine : 1
5. Difficult to determine the accurate incidence of any disease in IndonesiaEpidemiological data generally are based on diagnosis made by physiciansAutopsy data are not very reliable, since autopsy is not a routine procedurePoor of reporting data particularly from rural area and private practice
6. Major Health problems : 1. Infection & Infectious diseases 2. Coronary artery disease 3. Diabetes 4. Geriatric diseases 5. CancerSeparate data between male female not available
9. Equipments
15. Tne Constrains of nuclear medicine in Indonesia Policy Nuclear medicine is not priority
Equipment Limited allocation of fund for procurement of equipment
and maintenance
Radiopharmaceutical
BATAN can produce various radionuclide
High cost due to unbalance between production and demand
Stability of quality and continuity of radiopharmaceutical supply
Man power
Lack of Nuclear Medicine Physician, other professional supporting nuclear medicine and mid-level personnel as well and most of them stay in Jakarta and Bandung
Lack of appreciation of the medical doctor to nuclear medicine
Misperception of the community on nuclear medicine