BEIJING, April 6 (Xinhua) -- China will promote
health-care reform in four areas -- public health services, medical treatment,
medical insurance and drug supply -- for both urban and rural residents,
according to a central government document released on Monday.
The reforms will make health-care more convenient and
affordable and narrow the urban and rural gap, said the reform guidelines,
jointly issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC)
and the State Council.
The government will provide unified education on
disease prevention and control, health-care for women and children, first aid,
blood donation and family planning to both urban and rural residents, the
guidelines said.
Efforts will be made to further improve the
sanitation of living and working conditions for urban and rural residents and to
deal with all forms of pollution, said the document, adding that the monitoring
for food sanitation and sanitation at work places and schools will be
strengthened.
Medical treatment will mainly depend on nonprofit
medical organizations with state-run hospitals playing the major role and
commercial hospitals developing in a complementary way, the guidelines said.
The medical service in rural areas will be greatly
improved, with emphasis on county-level hospitals. Large hospitals in cities
should provide long-term aid to county-level hospitals in terms of clinical
services, personnel training, technological guidance and equipment sharing,
according to the document.
The reform will set up a new urban medical system
based on community health-care services, which can help lower the medical
expenses and provide more convenient service.
Chinese traditional medicine will play a bigger role
in disease prevention and control, and in dealing with emergency public health
incidents and medical care services, the document said.
The guidelines said a comprehensive medical insurance
system composed of the basic medical insurance for urban employers and
employees, basic medical insurance for urban residents and a new rural
cooperative medical care program will cover 90 percent of the population by
2011.
In 1998, China began to establish a medical care
system, aimed to cover all employers and employees in urban areas. The country
introduced a comprehensive medical insurance program, which covers all urban
residents, including children and the unemployed, in July 2007. A total of 79
cities were selected to launch the pilot program.
The insurance system's principle will shift from
major diseases to also covering minor diseases. Commercial medical care
insurance will also be made available to meet individual needs, according to the
guidelines.
The document said China will speed up the
establishment of a drug supply system to ensure basic supply and safety. The
system is based on a catalogue of necessary drugs that are produced and
distributed under government control and supervision.
The basic medical insurance will cover all listed
drugs to effectively provide access to a range of basic medicines and to reduce
quality problems, and prevent manufacturers and business people from
circumventing the government's price controls.
China unveils health-care reform
guidelines
BEIJING, April 6
(Xinhua) -- China Monday unveiled a blueprint for health-care over the next
decade, kicking off a much-anticipated reform to fix the ailing medical system
and to ensure fair and affordable health services for all 1.3 billion
citizens.
The Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and
the State Council, or China's Cabinet, jointly endorsed and issued the
Guidelines on Deepening the Reform of Health-care System after about three years
of intense debate and repeated revision. Full story