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Chan positive on public health efforts
Beijing(China)—The
director-general elect of the World Health Organization (WHO) has
praised China’s efforts to improve its public health systems.
“China has made great progress in building a public disease surveillance
and prevention system and has made a huge investment in the field of
public health since the 2003 SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome)
outbreak,” Margaret Chan told China Daily yesterday.
“I’ve noticed that the Chinese Government has made unremitting efforts
to improve medical services, especially for the rural population and
disadvantaged urban groups,” Chan said.
“They have chosen a very good work priority,” she added. Chan was
speaking after a meeting with Premier Wen Jiabao. “I was reminded by
Premier Wen that my duty as director-general of the WHO is to serve all
members of the WHO,” Chan said.
During the meeting, Wen pledged to further strengthen co-operation with
the world health body.
Wen said China will work with the WHO in disease prevention and control,
information sharing and construction of public health systems. He stated
that China had established sound co-operative relations with the WHO,
and would continue to support and maintain close ties with the
organization.
“The Chinese Government has attached great importance to public health,
and has set promoting the overall level of Chinese people’s health as a
priority,” Wen told Chan.
He noted that China has set up a nationwide disease prevention and
control system and medical treatment system for public health
emergencies in recent years. Now the country can release epidemic
information in a prompt, open, and transparent way and can effectively
curb the spread of infectious diseases.
The two sides also discussed efforts China has made to facilitate
medical care system reform, establish a new rural co-operative medical
service, and improve urban community medical care.
Wen congratulated Chan for her success in the election for WHO
director-general, which made her the first Chinese national to head a
United Nations agency. Wen had earlier described Chan as the “best
person” to head the agency. Appointed by the World Health Assembly on
November 9, 2006, Chan will take office on January 4. According to her
2007-12 mandate, Chan will focus on Africa as well as women’s health.
Chan was previously WHO assistant director-general for communicable
diseases and representative of the director-general for Pandemic
Influenza. Prior to joining the WHO, she was director of health in Hong
Kong. During her nine-year tenure Chan confronted the first human
outbreak of H5N1 avian influenza in 1997, and successfully defeated SARS
in Hong Kong in 2003.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |