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Local govts to oversee healthcare bodies
Beijing—Medical institutions
across the country are to come under the administration of local health
authorities in a bid to repair a system that has been critizized for its
sky-high fees, a top official has said.
The government has already agreed the basic framework of the reform,
Health Minister Chen Zhu said in a report published last week. The move
will “deepen” the reform of the health system by 2020, he said. The main
issues are improving public medical care, health insurance, the drug
supply, and the management of medical institutions. Until those goals
have been reached, China will have a healthcare system that is no better
than what is available in “medium developed” countries, Chen said.
Medical institutions in China are owned and managed by a range of
different bodies, including central and local health authorities, and
other government departments. This has hindered reform, the report said.
Some hospitals are overburdened with patients, while others are
operating below capacity, it said.
The report also said the healthcare system was under-funded. However,
the government has promised greater investment, including more funds for
the control and prevention of diseases. Figures from the Ministry of
Health show that in 2004, less than 6 percent of the country’s GDP was
put back into the health sector, accounting for just 17 percent of the
total amount spent on healthcare over the year. Of the remainder,
medical insurance schemes covered about 29 percent of the costs, with
patients left to shoulder 54 percent. Spending on medicine accounted for
44 percent of the total, compared with 15 percent in Europe. The report
said profits from drug sales sustained many medical institutions. Many
people struggle to pay for medical care, the report said, with a large
number falling victim to the high fees hospitals charge for treatments
not covered by State subsidies.—Xinhua |