BT · BTN
Informational only — not medical, legal, or travel advice. In an emergency, always call your local emergency number; availability can change.
New cases / 100k
234
Annual incidence
Deaths / 100k
117
Stroke mortality
DALYs / 100k
856
Healthy years lost
Reference year 2004. Rates per 100,000 population unless noted.
Emergency numbers
Ambulance / emergency112WHO reports acute stroke care and rehabilitation are provided in more than half of public-sector health facilities. Suspected stroke should be treated as a time-critical emergency — recognize symptoms (FAST), call emergency services, and seek the nearest capable hospital.
Bhutan has ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. On the ground, day-to-day accessibility for stroke survivors is emerging and uneven. Pockets of accessibility exist in the capital; most of the country has little usable infrastructure.
This profile is modeled from income group, region and WHO indicators — the specific national disability statute has not been individually verified for Bhutan.
Urban vs rural reality
Pockets of accessibility exist in the capital; most of the country has little usable infrastructure.
Formal web accessibility requirements are limited or inconsistently enforced.
Accessibility sources: UN Treaty Collection — CRPD ratification status (2024); Stroke Technology — modeled accessibility estimate (income group, region & WHO stroke-care indicators) (2026).
The vertical marker on each bar shows the regional average.
Last verified June 9, 2026. Found something out of date? Report incorrect info.
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Made with care for survivors and caregivers.
Formal disability benefits and caregiver support are limited; families carry most of the burden.