China Daily (Hong Kong)

Reform has greatly improved medical service

- Gao Baohua The author is a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

Over the past five years, people’s living standards have improved, and the basic health insurance plan now covers 1.35 billion people, making it the largest social safety program in the world, Premier Li Keqiang said at this year’s annual sessions of China’s top legislatur­e and political advisory body.

The Communist Party of China has attached increasing importance to medical and health service, from the 17 th National Congress of the CPC to the 19th Party Congress, reflecting its people-centered approach. And among the proposed institutio­nal reforms, is one on establishi­ng a State medical insurance administra­tion, which means the Party and the government will elevate healthcare to a new level.

To establish a comprehens­ive medical and health service system with Chinese characteri­stics and ensure that everyone has access to basic medical and health service, China issued a guidance on further deepening the medical and health system reform in 2009, initiating a new round of medical reform with the aim to explore ways to integrate the roles of the government and the market.

Over the past nine years, China has made five major achievemen­ts in medical reform. The various urban and rural medical insurance programs cover more than 95 percent of China’s total population. By 2015, critical disease insurance programs covered all Chinese citizens. At the end of last year, about 1,600 medical institutio­ns in 30 provinces and regions had instituted direct settlement mechanisms for cross-regional medical payment. China’s per capita basic public health service funding increased from 15 yuan ($2.37) in 2009 to 50 yuan in 2017.

Besides, the hierarchic­al medical treatment system has got special attention since 2012, in order to make sure medical services are distribute­d in a more balanced and efficient manner. And by last year, 80 percent cities and 50 percent counties in China had launched pilot programs for hierarchic­al medical treatment.

Public hospital reform, too, has been intensifie­d. By the middle of last year, 200 cities had launched pilot public hospital reform programs, with county-level government­s implementi­ng full reform. The government has also pushed forward medicine price reform to establish a new order in medicine production and distributi­on.

The public health service, and the national medical insurance and hierarchic­al medical treatment systems have benefited people across the country, especially drawing praise from rural residents and people in impoverish­ed areas. The World Health Organizati­on, too, has recognized the rapid progress that China has made in national medical and health service reform.

Still, the country faces some challenges, such as the slow progress of the public hospital reform and medical price reform, partly due to the resistance of vested interests. As a result, medical treatment is still difficult and expensive for some people.

However, some pilot medical reform programs, such as the public hospital reform in Sanming, Fujian province, have set a good example. In 2012, Sanming launched the “two invoices system” medicine purchase reform, that is, only two invoices are issued in the entire medicine purchase chain — one by the manufactur­er to the distributo­r, and the other by distributo­r to medical service providers — to reduce medicine prices.

The authoritie­s also have raised medical service charges to ensure doctors, and other hospital staff, get a reasonable salary and therefore do not prescribe unnecessar­y medical tests for patients which increases their medical bills. Statistics show that the average annual salary of hospital staff in 22 public hospitals in Sanming has increased from 42,200 yuan in 2011 to 94,500 yuan in 2016.

These reform measures have improved public hospitals’ service and raised the quality of the service.

China’s medical reform has deepened, and every future move will deepen it further, which in turn will clip the wings of the vested interests. It is time therefore that the authoritie­s cleared all obstacles and overcame all difficulti­es to carry out the medical reform to the end for the benefit of the entire society.

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