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China’s healthcare system receives recovery treatment
By Li Huizi
As Zhang Lan approached 60, she found herself often feeling dizzy when
going up and down the stairs. Zhang, 58, a retired employee of a failed
state-owned washing machine factory, dismissed her son's pleas for her
to see a doctor. "These problems are common when you get old," she said.
Zhang's reluctance to see a doctor is common among China's elderly who
fear doctors are only out to make money from them. Many delay going to a
doctor, allowing minor ailments to develop into serious conditions that
end up consuming their savings.
On top of the cost is the inconvenience. Zhang's son, Wang Qi, usually
makes appointments for her, rushing to the hospital early only to find a
long queue in front of the registration window - another reason for
Zhang not to see a doctor about her dizziness.
Her unwillingness persisted until she fell down the stairs of her
apartment block. The doctor said she had a brain tumor, which was still
treatable - but only with immediate surgery. Since the operation, Wang
Qi, a 27-year-old bank clerk who earns just 2,000 yuan (267 U.S.
dollars) a month, has scrimped and saved and investigated every possible
avenue to pay his mother's 100,000-yuan (13,300 U.S. dollars) medical
bill. He still hopes China's medicare system might help.
Coughing Up the Cash
When Zhang was still working in 2000, she joined a "medical insurance
system for employed urban residents" through her factory, or "danwei",
having 2 percent of her monthly salary automatically submitted as
premiums to her account at the local social security service center. A
1998 State Council decision that launched China's medicare reform
allowed urban employees, including pensioners, to join locally-operated
medicare systems, combining personal insurance and social security.
Smaller outpatient treatment fees are mainly paid from the personal
account, while larger hospitalization expenses are paid mainly from the
social security fund.
Pensioners are exempted from paying the premiums. Zhang, with a monthly
pension of 1,000 yuan (133 U.S. dollars), receives 1,200 yuan (160 U.S.
dollars) a year from her personal account for outpatient treatment.
"Actually, the government will let pensioners have free outpatient
services. If they see the doctor frequently, they still have most of the
outpatient fees refunded," said a staff member with the social security
service center of Chaoyang District in east Beijing.
However, larger medical expenses for surgery and hospitalization are
still a major financial burden for the ill. The government encourages
enterprises to establish supplementary medical insurance for their
staff, mainly for medical expenses not covered by the medicare system.
But Zhang's factory was on the verge of total financial collapse.
"About half of my mom's medical bills were reimbursed via medical
insurance," says Wang Qi. "The medical insurance only covers part of the
surgery cost for complicated services like brain surgery, but we still
have a huge amount to pay ourselves," says Wang.
The Collapse of the Free Medical Service
Under China's planned economic system last century, Zhang enjoyed
completely free healthcare. The work unit, or danwei, provided
everything. The danwei provided for all needs, including subsidies for
daily necessities, education, transport and housing. A generation of
Chinese are still nostalgic over food coupons for staples like eggs and
meat. "The danwei was omnipotent," says Tian Ying, 51, a retired
accountant of a state-owned cotton textile factory.
Tian says people at that time had few wants as everyone had a similar
standard of living and the low salaries were enough to get by. "If you
needed an operation, you asked the danwei to pay the medical fees, even
for your children. Everything was free." However, Tian says, many
danweis could not afford to maintain the welfare from the cradle to the
grave. "Gradually the burgeoning medical bills became too much, and if
your danwei was rich, you were very lucky."
Financial departments were the danweis' busiest offices. Workers rose
early to have medical bills reimbursed through a small window, but
usually after a morning, the accountants had to tell waiting queues that
the money had run out. "The problem was that the free medical care
resulted in a huge waste of resources," says Tan Shen, a research fellow
with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a government think-tank.
Medicare for Everyone
The central government began to reform the healthcare system in the
1990s after finding the dilapidated public-funded medicare system was no
longer effective. In 1998, urban employees began paying 2 percent of
their salaries into their personal medical insurance accounts, and
employers were obliged to contribute 4 percent of their total wage bill
to a social security fund operated by local governments. "This has
separated employee medicare from the danwei system, and greatly reduced
enterprises' financial burden. It has made it easier to rejuvenate
state-owned enterprises," says researcher Tan.
However, the health sector is coming under growing criticism for
rocketing medical fees, inaccessibility, poor doctor-patient relations
and the low coverage of the medicare system. Statistics from the Health
Ministry show that soaring medical costs have plunged many rural and
urban Chinese back into poverty, with one third of rural patients
choosing not to go to hospital and 45 percent of rural patients
discharging themselves from hospital before fully recovering. A survey
released last December by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences showed
healthcare expenses had risen to 11.8 percent of average household
consumption, exceeding spending on education and transport, a very high
percentage even compared with developed countries.
A 2005 report by the Development Research Center under the State
Council, China's cabinet, harshly criticized the health sector reform
and concluded that reforms over the past decade were "basically
unsuccessful". The report stirred a public debate over the path of
China's reforms of the healthcare system. The government is yet to
decide on a long-term policy. Experts are still comparing reform paths
by studying different medicare systems and proposals. The thorniest
issues are funding and management structures. However, the government
took a major step this year, extending access to reasonably priced
medical care and insurance to 80 percent of Chinese counties and more
urban residents, including those without danwei.
Official statistics show just 157 million of the country's 1.3 billion
people were covered by medical insurance at the end of last year, most
of them urban workers and pensioners who had danwei. This year, urban
residents - including children and the self-employed - who are not
covered by the "medical insurance for urban workers" can be insured
through the "medical insurance for urban residents". Local governments
will allocate funds to partially cover major treatments.
"Urban residents without danwei, including the self-employed and private
business owners, can now be covered," says researcher Tan Shen. One
reform plan that might be adopted is to change a number of public
hospitals into community medical service providers that offer almost
outpatient services for residents and migrant workers, says Liu Xinming,
a Health Ministry official in charge of medical policies and
regulations. The rural cooperative healthcare system, founded in 2003,
will cover 80 percent of all China's counties before the end of the year
and all rural areas by next year, to help China's 900 million rural
dwellers.
About 50.7 percent of the country's rural areas, or 1,451 counties, were
covered by the system at the end of last year, with 410 million farmers,
47.2 percent of the rural population, signed up. Last year, the system
raised 21.36 billion yuan (2.85 billion U.S. dollars), and spent 15.58
billion yuan (2.08 billion U.S. dollars), statistics show. Participants
pay 10 yuan (1.3 U.S. dollars) a year, while the state, provincial,
municipal and county governments jointly chip in another 40 yuan (5.3
U.S. dollars) for the cooperative fund. Farmers who contribute then get
a proportion of their expenses refunded according to the treatment they
receive.
The State Council earlier this year adopted a five-year plan to further
develop the public health system, which promises to establish a basic
medicare network covering the whole population by the end of 2010. The
public health service network will include rural cooperative medicare,
urban community medical services and public hospital management systems.
However, a unified national medicare system is still a long way off due
to the low level of urbanization, widening wealth gap, and vast contrast
in regional development, former Health Minister Gao Qiang has said. A
final version of the medicare reform policy will be unveiled after
authorities compare reform schemes and solicit public opinions,
according to him.
—China Features |