Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2008
BEIJING, March 10 (Xinhua) -- China is determined to
improve the grassroots health care system with a bigger budget, a senior health
official said on the sidelines of the annual session of the country's top
political advisory body.
"More than 20 billion yuan (2.8 billion U.S. dollars)
will be allocated this year from the central budget and central and western
governments to upgrade the township health institutions," deputy health minister
Gao Qiang said.
He said the government's primary task is to work for
grassroots medical institutions rather than for large hospitals to narrow the
yawning gap of medicare between rural and urban areas.
Despite China's economic progress, its health care
services, particularly in rural areas, have failed to keep pace as medical
facilities are mainly concentrated in urban areas. Poorly-equipped rural clinics
and a shortage of medical staff have restricted the quality and availability of
medicare for farmers.
A report by the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2006
revealed that almost two thirds of the health funds was spent on urban areas
covering only one third of the country's population.
He Wei, a political advisor from the Chinese Peasants
and Workers Democratic Party, advised setting up more rural clinics to improve
the fairness of medical resources distribution.
Every 1,000 people in rural China share one village
doctor. A total of 11.9 percent of villages had no village clinic by the end of
2006, according to He.
"If the priority was always given to big hospitals
instead of grassroots clinics, the government goal that everyone in China has
access to basic medicare could never be realized," said Gao Qiang.
The quality of grassroots medical staff, in addition,
also needs to be increased, said Gao, since "poor facilities and limited funds
have prevented them from getting proper training."