Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, July 4 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of
Health (MOH) is launching a campaign against possible abuse in the handling of
performance-enhancing drugs among medical institutions nationwide.
The inspection, from June 27 to July 15, was checking
whether the Anti-Doping Regulation, issued in 2004, had been strictly followed
by medical institutions, ministry sources said.
The MOH is checking whether medical sectors have
trained medical staff to properly prescribe and use medicine containing
performance-enhancing substances, and whether they purchased drugs labeled for
"athletes use with special caution."
It will inspect both public and private hospitals and
clinics, sources said, stressing special attention would be given to those
located within the Olympic host cities.
The ministry urged public health authorities at the
provincial level to carry out the work effectively and keep the administration
of prohibited drugs under control.
Those found guilty of or responsible for the
mishandling of doping drugs would be severely punished, sources said.
In a recent anti-doping move, senior central
government officials were sent to Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin and 12 provinces
for anti-doping inspections.
They were dispatched by seven ministry-level
government agencies, including drug safety, health and public security watchdogs
and the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG).
During that inspection, every link, from drug
producers and chemical plants to medicine wholesalers and retailers, was checked
through spot checks, both announced and covert.
The country's first anti-doping program was launched
in the 1980s.
In 1992, the Chinese Anti-Doping Commission was
established. Three years later, the Standing Committee of National People's
Congress passed the Sport Law of China.
In 2004, the Anti-Doping Regulation of China issued
by the State Council, came into force.