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Equal inoculation services promised for migrants' kids
BEIJING, April 10 (Xinhua) -- The children of
migrants are entitled to the same government inoculations as their urban peers,
said a senior official with the Chinese Ministry of Health (MOH) here Monday.
MOH spokesman Mao Qun'an said the government would
also improve inoculation services to people in remote and poor areas.
He called on all health administrations to educate
migrants on the benefits of inoculation. This year, China launched a national
program to ensure that every child at kindergarten and school be fully
inoculated.
Mao said the World Health Organization had confirmed
that China had no cases of poliomyelitis in 2000. However, the myelitis virus
still affected many people in countries neighboring with China. Last year, China
saw a surge in cases of measles, as well as the outbreak or spread of epidemic
cerebrospinal meningitis and epidemic encephalitis B.
"Therefore, we should pay more attention to and take
concrete steps to improve the vaccination work," he said.
China began a nationwide inoculation program for
children in 1978, and has set every April 25 since 1986 as the National Day for
Inoculation for Children.
It is believed the country has 19.81 million children
of migrant workers, accounting for 19.37 percent of the total migrant
population. The government has taken steps to ensure migrant children enjoy the
same public services as urban children in terms of education, health, and civil
rights.
Earlier this year, the national capital of Beijing,
with the largest number of migrants believed to be about four million, promised
services for migrants the same as the locals in healthcare, education and family
planning.
Migrant women will enjoy the same low-cost health checks and medical services during pregnancy and childbearing, and their children will get free vaccinations against epidemic diseases. Enditem
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