New medical reforms focus on grassroots medication By Qu Liqiu (China Business News/sinofile.net) Updated: 2005-12-01 10:00
The long-awaited new round of medical reform has finally come to light. Nov.
12, an expert at the General Office of the Ministry of Health discloses that a
national medical reform will be launched at the beginning of next year.
The basic medical system is supposed to cover 90% of all Chinese people and
to bear at least half their medical expenses. Five principles for this reform
have been set up, including giving priority to rural areas and to urgent issues.
Our reporter has recently interviewed Tang Jun, secretary general of the Social
Policy Research Center of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Marketization cannot be promoted at the cost of state-owned assets
Reporter: Can I regard the information the Ministry of
Health released on Nov. 12 as the core of this round of medical reform?
Tang Jun: You can. However, some issues are still open to
further discussion. For instance, what should be done to ensure that this reform
will cover 90% of the masses. According to one source, by 2010, farmers around
the country will be covered by a new rural medical cooperative system. However,
a specific plan for this coverage has yet to be established.
Reporter: According to the disclosed information, what do
you think is the biggest difference between the last medical reform and the
upcoming one?
Tang Jun: The five principles for the upcoming reform show
that this reform is in line with a people-centered philosophy, and puts aside
marketization and industrialization. This is a signal of great progress. In
addition, this reform attaches great importance to basic medical treatment and
medical services in communities.
Reporter: Why is the upcoming reform aimed only at 90% of
the population instead of 100%?
Tang Jun: This is just being prudent. I personally believe
that it is practical to promote "all-people" medical services and to allow every
person to enjoy basic medical services. In order to achieve these goals, we may
use and build on our past experience. During the first 30 years since the
founding of New China, 99% of the urban population has been based on work units,
for which clinics and even hospitals were available. It is convenient for this
population to have access to doctors. Above these clinics and work
units-oriented hospitals, there were community hospitals and even larger
hospitals. Everyone could afford medical services despite the lack of medical
resources in this period. The work units-based administrative system has since
crashed. However, we can still transfer the successful medical service models to
communities so as to set up a network of infrastructure for medical services in
China. In order to achieve this goal, the following issues must be dealt with.
First, the operations model for doctors and their business should change. For
instance, if doctors still provide sit-in medical services at clinics or
hospitals, it will be a meaningless practice. Community doctors are bound by
responsibility to do more than merely treat illnesses. They should help
community residents establish health records, give checkups and provide
family-care services as necessary. In other words, they should work more like
the barefoot doctors of the past. Normal hospitals, which are at a higher level
than community hospitals, should focus on serious illnesses and
difficult-to-treat illnesses. There should be interaction between community
hospitals and normal hospitals so that when a community hospital cannot
adequately take care of patient, the patient can turn to normal hospitals.
Given the state of the upcoming reform, medical care costs will be sharply
cut and medical services will be more available to the ordinary person. Most
patients suffer from normal illnesses, such as colds. It is unnecessary for
these patients to go to large hospitals. And patients who suffer from chronic
illnesses, such as hypertension and diabetes, would not have to line up and wait
at large hospitals. Therefore, it would be feasible to provide community-based
all-people medical services. These services will be much cheaper than the
current medical services based on medical insurance policies. According to one
calculation, on the average, each person covered by medical insurance policies
has to pay RMB1,000 a year. This is too heavy a burden for many people to bear.
The government should be entirely responsible for the health of average
person.
Reporter: Those that are wealthy hope to receive better
services. It seems that with the upcoming medical reform, this will not be met.
Tang Jun: In addition to government-run hospitals, there are
some private hospitals, which provide high comfort, hotel-like medical services,
on the condition that state-owned assets are not used for these private
hospitals. Each person has the right to receive services provided by state-owned
hospitals. Also, an individual is permitted to invest in any kind of private
hospitals. The governments are bound by duty to supervise and regulate private
hospitals, which are permitted to charge patients based on the market.
Therefore, I believe three levels of medical service providers are necessary in
China. The focus lies in the grassroots ones anyway.
Reporter: What topics have sparked the hottest debate?
Tang Jun: The hottest dispute lies in the need to marketize
and industrialize medical services. According to economists, the prevailing
medical service reform is not successful because it was not a full-fledged
reform. They believe that an excellent marketization of medical services is
still possible under certain conditions. I believe that the field of medical
services is a very special field because of the requirements in special
know-how. It is quite traditional to haggle over market prices when it comes to
buying things. The preferences of consumers help bring prices into a reasonable
range. However, it is impossible for patients to bargain with doctors. When a
doctor advises a patient to undergo an operation, the patient cannot refuse. It
is impossible to see market mechanisms playing a role in the field of medicine.
According to well-known psychologist A. H. Maslow people's needs fall into
five levels. People's needs at the first level are biological needs, which
include health and eating. The government must step forward and help ordinary
people when they have difficulty in meeting these needs. Therefore, being
entirely responsible for the health of ordinary people is the most fundamental
duty of the government. I always say that the Ministry of Health is duty bound
to stand in the corner of ordinary people and manage hospitals on behalf of
ordinary people. However, this ministry took the side of hospitals and has acted
as "general president" of all hospitals. This ministry created benefits for
hospitals but not for ordinary people. If you go to a grassroots work units and
talk with officials of local public health bureaus, these officials always
naturally say, "The hospital is my son." Therefore, many problems cannot be
solved until this ministry takes the "correct" side. However, these five
principles still do not give a clear indication of the attitude of public health
administrations.
The upcoming medical reform calls for terminating the monopolistic position
of hospitals.
Reporter: According to the five principles for the upcoming
medical reform, this reform emphasizes "priority to guarantee construction of
grassroots medical institutions in rural areas." What do you think should be
done in order to create an infrastructure network for effective medical
services?
Tang Jun: We have been firm in promoting a three-level
medial service system. However, if you head to rural areas, you will notice that
central hospitals at the town levels are like chicken ribs, which are tasteless
but will be a waste of money (meat) if thrown away. This is because
transportation to cities is now convenient. If a farmer is ill, this farmer will
first try to seek treatment at the local clinic. Should this solution not be
adequate, the farmer will go directly to a large hospital in the city.
Therefore, hospitals at the township and town levels have limited business. I
feel it is necessary to locate these hospitals to lower levels. If the
government insists on keeping first-level hospitals, hospitals at the township
and town levels, these hospitals should be located in accordance with convenient
transportation routes or conditions. In addition, doctors working at these
first-level hospitals should function and work more like barefoot doctors in the
past. The strength of this model is that doctors in village clinics do not earn
salaries from the government but from the medical services provided to farmers.
Doctors working in the first-level hospitals are paid by the national
government. If these doctors go to rural areas, it will substantially cut the
burden of farmers. I believe it is necessary to encourage these doctors to
relocate to remote rural areas. The more remote areas they go to, the more money
they can make.
Reporter: What is the largest obstacle for the upcoming
medical reform? Funding or professionals?
Tang Jun: Neither of the two. The largest obstacle would be
the benefits of some social groups. Some pharmaceutical companies, hospitals and
government officials have a very strong influence on the entire medical system.
These work units and officials have a monopoly on this system. If this monopoly
is removed, all remaining problems will be solved.
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