| Inject
funds into ailing health system
04/15/2003
China Daily
Poor medical services stand in the way of many farmers' pursuit
of a better life, an Outlook Weekly article warns.
Although more and more farmers are shaking off poverty and building
up savings, they risk losing it all if they fall sick, the article
said.
Illness has become farmers' "biggest fear."
Many cannot afford to see doctors because the price of medical
services has far outstripped their incomes.
According to the article, farmers' per capita income increased
from around 680 yuan (US$82) to 2,210 yuan (US$267) or so in the
last decade.
But the average outpatient charge has rocketed from 10.9 yuan (US$1.30)
to 79 yuan (US$9.50). The cost of hospitalization has also jumped
from 47 yuan (US$5.70) to 289 yuan (US$34.90) over the same period.
Farmers have poorer health and other welfare services than city
dwellers. The disparity in such services is even bigger than their
income gap, said the article.
More than two thirds of China's medical services cater to residents
in cities, who account for only 15 per cent of the country's population.
In the countryside, the numbers of patients who cannot buy medicines
and families impoverished by disease are on the rise.
A survey in East China's Anhui Province shows families hit by illness
account for about half of the poor rural families in the province.
Preventive medicine experts estimate that about 80 per cent of
people with HIV in China live in the countryside.
Poor medicare services in rural areas not only affect farmers'
health but also hinder the nation in realizing the goal of building
a better-off society nationwide, said the article.
China has built a primary and multi-layered medicare system which
helps control diseases and sustain social development.
However, rural health services in general have improved little
in recent years and are increasingly lagging behind urban health
services. The article attributes the problem to inefficient management
and a lack of funding.
Most rural hospitals are run by local township governments unfamiliar
with the medical profession and too poor to finance hospitals. Many
rural and township hospitals are dogged by ageing equipment and
insufficient staff. Some rural governments even place unqualified
staff in these hospitals because of the brain drain to the cities.
To address the problem, the central government decided last October
that governments at all levels should gradually increase their public
health expenditure.
In January, the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Finance and Ministry
of Agriculture jointly formulated a scheme to build a rural co-operative
health service system.
Under the scheme, the system will be co-financed by governments,
rural collective units and individual farmers, and will mainly provide
relief for farmers suffering serious diseases. Farmers can participate
in the programme voluntarily. The new programme offers farmers benefits
from the money they spend on health, said the article.
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