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UPDATED: April 22, 2009 NO. 16 APR. 23, 2009
A Big Umbrella
Chinese healthcare reform plan pledges universal coverage
By LI LI
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CHEAP DRUGS: A pharmacy in Yichang City, Hubei Province. As part of China's comprehensive healthcare reform, the government will regulate an inventory of essential medicines to control prices and make medical treatment cheaper (REN WEIHONG) 

China unveiled healthcare reform blueprints on April 6 that outline changes over the next decade meant to fix the country's ailing medical system and to ensure fair and affordable services for all citizens.

Concluding a drafting process that began in 2006, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council-the cabinet-jointly issued the Guidelines on Deepening the Reform of the Healthcare System. Officials released a draft of the plan for public debate last October and collected 35,260 comments and suggestions during the month-long debate.

The document says China's goal is to develop a basic healthcare system by 2020 that provides "safe, effective, convenient and affordable" health services to urban and rural residents. Drafters wrote that the plan's core principle is to provide basic health care as a public service to all citizens, which will require much more government funding and supervision.

"Robust government spending will drive down the proportion of individuals' spending on medical expenses," said Vice Minister of Health Zhang Mao at an April 8 press conference. He said the intention is to realize four goals: to improve people's overall health through government-subsidized checkups and vaccine programs; to make medical services more convenient by upgrading facilities and personnel training at local health centers, and by making changes at state-run hospitals; to make medical treatment affordable to all through expanded medical insurance packages that cover the whole population; and to make treatment cheaper by introducing an inventory of essential medicines whose prices will be regulated by the government. State-run medical institutions are not allowed to take profits by selling these necessary medicines.

For decades, the government covered more than 90 percent of urban residents' medical expenses after the 1949 founding of the People's Republic of China. Meanwhile, rural people had access to subsidized health clinics run by "barefoot doctors," who were often middle-school students trained in first aid. The essentially free primitive service played a vital role in doubling the country's average life expectancy from 35 years in 1949 to 68 years in 1978.

Then in the early 1980s, China launched market-oriented reforms on the country's healthcare system. With the goal of pushing hospital employees to work harder and improving the efficiency of hospitals, officials encouraged public institutions to generate their own incomes. Government investment in public hospitals gradually dropped.

But less government input and supervision resulted in the over-commercialization of hospital practices. They prescribed drugs aggressively to make higher profits. Soaring fees plunged many rural and urban Chinese back into poverty and made medical services harder for ordinary citizens to afford.

Key measures

As part of the reforms mentioned in the blueprint, the government will improve the public health network for disease prevention and control, health education, mother and infant health care, mental health and first-aid services.

Public nonprofit hospitals will continue to be the dominant providers of medical services, while higher priority will be given to developing local hospitals and clinics in cities and rural areas.

Patients will be encouraged to use their local hospitals and clinics, which will be able to provide more accessible and affordable services. Regional hospitals in big cities, meanwhile, will be asked to give more personnel, expertise and equipment to small, local providers.

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