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SHIJIAZHUANG, Aug. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Li Suhua, a 42-year-old rural woman in
north China, was quite familiar with visits by family planning officials, who
always came to enforce the "one child" policy. But Li was surprised to learn
recently they came to give her a free health check-up.
"I've never had any sort of health check-up before," said Li, who lives in Tahuangqi
Village of Fengning County in north China's Hebei Province.
"Quite often I felt pain in my belly, but I used to treat it with pain
killers bought from local drugstore," she said.
Li was diagnosed with cervical erosion, which for years she thought was
just an annoying belly ache.
"Without the check-up, I wouldn't have known how bad the situation is," she
said. "It saved my life and my family."
Like Li, many Chinese women living in rural areas never receivereproductive
health check-ups, either because they can not afford it or simply because they
are unfamiliar with reproductive health issues, said Hu Dianzhen, head of the
county's family planning service station.
A recent survey showed that 30 to 40 percent of married women in rural
Hebei have suffered from gynecological diseases for years, one tenth has lost
the ability to work.
As a result, the provincial family planning commission has launched a
program which combines free reproductive health checks with routine birth
control surveillance for the nine million womenliving in rural areas, said Zhao
Xin, head of the Hebei Commissionof Population and Family Planning.
Those to be covered by the program are married women below the age of 49.
Items of the check-ups include breast disease, diseaseson reproductive organs,
and other common gynecological diseases.
A general check-up normally costs 50 to 60 yuan (6.05-7.25 US dollars),
equivalent to a farmer's income of half a month in the province, Zhao said.
Once diagnosed as having reproductive problems, the female spouse will be
advised to receive medical treatment. Extremely poor couples are eligible for
free medical aid, the official said.
"The program not only brings real benefits to women, but also improves the
relations between the general public and the authorities," a local official
said.
Previously, China's family planning officials only took charge of
supervising the implementation of the "one child" policy and persuading couples
not to have more than one baby.
In poor rural areas, where men shoulder the burden of supporting family
life, local officials were often criticized to implement the one-child policy
indiscriminately and be rude to couples who are unable to pay fines.
"But things are changing," Zhao Xin said.
In provinces like Hebei, Shandong, Anhui and Henan, family planning
officials are distributing free condoms, advocating HIV/AIDS awareness and
briefing gynecological problems to marriedwomen.
As a result, people are becoming more and more friendly to birth control
officials, Zhao said, adding, "They give us eggs andfruit, and even welcome us
with country performances."
Zhang Shikun, a senior official with the State Commission for Population
and Family Planning, said she was not surprised by thechange in the attitude of
rural women because they have benefited by the officials' work.
"China's current family planning policies are not just designedto curb
population growth but also to improve the quality of everyone's life," she said.
Zhao Baige, deputy director of the State Commission for Population and Family Planning, said at the tenth anniversary of the Happiness Project for needy mothers that the new practices of Hebei are worth introducing nationwide so that check-ups become an indispensable and routine part of the work of family planning officials. Enditem |