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Health care reform focuses on public service: Premier
BEIJING—China’s health care
reform plan will focus on the public health service, said Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao here Tuesday.
Through the reform plan, the country will ensure the non-profit nature
of its public medical service, and speed up building a health insurance
network in both urban and rural areas, improve the public health service
and set up a state catalog, production and distribution of basic
medicines, Wen said at a meeting held by the State Council.
About 22 experts, medical workers, ordinary citizens and representatives
from pharmacy companies attended the meeting, the first held to solicit
opinions about a draft plan for health care reform.
Participants contributed valuable and helpful ideas to the draft plan,
the Premier said, “We will study them carefully and improve the draft
plan.”
The draft plan will be announced nationwide to solicit public opinion
when it is ready, he said.
“Health care reform is relevant to every citizen and family. It is a
very tough and complicated reform,” he said. “We will work hard to put
it in the right direction and adopt practical principles and measures.”
Soaring medical costs in recent years have plunged many rural and urban
Chinese back into poverty as a result of the government’s failure to
implement an adequate medical insurance network after it cut subsidies
for medical costs in 1992.
According to a survey by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) last
year on “unsafe” factors upsetting the public, rising medical costs have
become the top concern among Chinese people. The high costs usually
result from expensive medicines.
The Chinese government started working on a health care reform plan in
June 2006 amid mounting concerns from the public about medical service.
This year the central government will allocate 83.2 billion yuan (about
11.7 billion U.S. dollars) to support the reform and development of
health care, an increase of 16.7 billion yuan (about 2.4 billion U.S.
dollars) over last year, with the focus on spending on facilities at the
urban community and village level.
About 22 experts, medical workers, ordinary citizens and representatives
from pharmacy companies attended the meeting, the first held to solicit
opinions about a draft plan for health care reform. Participants
contributed valuable and helpful ideas to the draft plan, the Premier
said, “We will study them carefully and improve the draft plan.”
—Xinhua |