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Most medics are victims of abuse
Beijing—Sixty percent of the
4,353 medical staff polled in a recent survey said they have witnessed
their colleagues being abused by patients and their relatives on a
regular basis.
The survey, conducted by medical portal www.dxy.cn and newspaper China
Youth Daily and released on Monday, polled a range of medical and
administrative professionals at hospitals.
Respondents said they had witnessed verbal and physical abuse directed
at their colleagues, the survey showed. More than half of those polled
said they had thought about leaving their jobs because of such
treatment. Most of the respondents were also against their children
becoming doctors.
Only a small minority of those surveyed, about 8 percent, said they have
not thought about a change. The problems plaguing the country’s medical
system have intensified with more medical disputes between medical staff
and patients occurring, Tan Xiaodong, professor with the School of
Public Health, Wuhan University, said.
Hospitals poorly subsidized by the government have to resort to making
money from medical services to increase staff salaries, Wang said, with
patients becoming the victims under such financially motivated
operations.
Despite more than half of those polled saying their work brought them
more trouble than joy, the survey found that treating diseases and
gaining patients’ trust was still the second most treasured form of
happiness experienced by respondents, after good health and family.
Some 2,655 of those surveyed said they felt most satisfied and delighted
by pay rises, while 45 percent said they experienced enhanced social
respect and status from their jobs. At the same time, 63 percent of
those polled said they were overworked and faced deteriorating mental
and physical health. Still, many did not go for regular medical
examinations, the poll showed. About 75 percent of the respondents have
also not considered mental therapy.—Xinhua |