North Korea medical gap widens as new data reveals a sharp disparity in healthcare access between Pyongyang and rural areas. While the capital boasts numerous hospitals, pharmacies, and pharmaceutical plants, large parts of the countryside lack even basic services.
A digital database from a local health app lists 193 medical facilities across 105 cities and counties. These include 26 hospitals, 119 pharmacies, 21 drug production plants, 13 medical research labs, and 14 sanatoriums. However, more than 50 counties show no hospitals or pharmacies at all.
Pyongyang’s Central District alone contains 37 medical institutions. Neighboring districts like Pyongchon, Taedonggang, Mangyongdae, and Potonggang each host 29 to 34 facilities. In contrast, provincial regions remain heavily underserved. This confirms how the North Korea medical gap widens across geographical and economic lines.
Pharmaceutical production is especially centralized. Mangyongdae leads with 11 factories and three medical labs, highlighting its key role in the national medical supply chain. Several capital districts have both research and production facilities, increasing efficiency and reducing the time from lab to market.
Interestingly, all 14 sanatoriums listed are outside the capital, likely due to environmental factors ideal for therapeutic recovery. However, this does not offset the lack of hospitals or pharmacies in those same areas.
Healthcare infrastructure growth appears tailored to serve urban elites. Medical facility representatives listed in the system use emails ending in @pt.net.kp, indicating oversight by national communication authorities.
The current setup may benefit pharmaceutical development, but the imbalance leaves rural populations without critical medical access. With urban districts rapidly advancing and remote areas falling behind, North Korea medical gap widens, revealing an urgent need for nationwide healthcare reform.