By Deandrea Hamilton | Magnetic Media
The Bahamas, August 4, 2025 – If the goal of the Pan American Health Organization’s latest publication on The Bahamas was to provide insight into how the country is doing on key health metrics, it fell short of the mark. Released in July, the “Country Annual Report 2023” is long on administrative updates and regional cooperation, but light on the kind of data and declarations that help the average Bahamian—and even policymakers—understand where we stand and where we’re headed.
There is no clear charting of metrics like hospital performance, primary health care delivery, response to chronic illnesses, or mental health outcomes. That’s unfortunate, because amid real concerns about the national healthcare system—especially in the Family Islands—this report had the potential to inform and even motivate progress. Instead, it reads like a list of meeting notes: how many workshops PAHO attended, which training events were facilitated, and how many tools were drafted.
To its credit, the document does highlight some technical support provided to The Bahamas in areas like food safety, climate-related health resilience, and disease surveillance. There’s also mention of support during the dengue scare and a nod to partnerships with local organizations like the Red Cross and the Department of Public Health. However, these came with no measurable outcomes. Were lives saved? Were infections reduced? Did this support prevent hospital overflow? We don’t know.
It is not that PAHO doesn’t care. It’s that the way the information is presented in this document simply doesn’t deliver for Bahamians. For a country that continues to invest in its healthcare infrastructure and workforce, we deserve a report that goes deeper and offers transparent findings on population health.
What We Want to See Next Time:
Future reports should include measurable indicators of health system performance. Give us year-over-year comparisons. Tell us how we compare to other Caribbean countries. Include patient satisfaction surveys, vaccination uptake rates, health equity assessments. And please—put The Bahamas in its own spotlight, rather than folding it into a list of regional statistics.
PAHO has the access and the expertise. The next step is ensuring the report reflects the lived experience of those it claims to represent.