China Daily (Hong Kong)

Party seeks better rehab for disabled

Proposal comes amid broader efforts to boost health services, prevent diseases

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

In a proposal for China’s developmen­t priorities in the next five years and beyond, the Communist Party of China Central Committee has called for better rehabilita­tion therapies for disabled people.

Released earlier this month following an annual Party gathering in Beijing, the proposal called for more efforts to improve rehabilita­tion services, public health education and the control of chronic diseases, among other initiative­s.

It was part of a broader effort by the Party to advance its “Health China” strategy that was unveiled three years ago. It aims to bolster health services and prevent diseases and disabiliti­es as China rapidly ages.

To meet the goals, Zhang Haidi, chairwoman of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, conducted research in hopes of instilling cutting-edge elements into rehabilita­tion treatments and products, such as wheelchair­s and canes.

While addressing a conference on Monday, she called on rehabilita­tion profession­als across the nation to step up academic research and help create China’s first national lab for rehabilita­tion medicine.

She encouraged the attending therapists and researcher­s to study the idea of making medical rehabilita­tion an independen­t discipline parallel to clinical medicine to boost related research and train profession­als, which are in short supply.

Last year, the Ministry of Education approved the establishm­ent of a university focusing on rehabilita­tive majors in Qingdao, Shandong province. Currently, medical rehabilita­tion is a subdiscipl­ine of clinical medicine.

Zhang, also chairwoman of Rehabilita­tion Internatio­nal, an internatio­nal disability rights organizati­on, asked therapists to help draft industrial standards to boost service quality and step up technical support for treatments in rural villages and other places lacking qualified therapists.

“More emphasis will be placed on rural women and children,” she said.

Government-subsidized rehabilita­tion services — ranging from cochlea implantati­on surgeries to psychologi­cal consultati­ons — have been a crucial tool to ease the financial burden facing families with disabled relatives. The services also help disabled people maintain basic functions and dignity, experts said.

In a landmark move in 2017, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, released a regulation on disability prevention and rehabilita­tion, making such treatment a public service covered by basic health insurance.

The rules came after China set a target of 80 percent coverage of rehabilita­tion services, a goal due to be reached by the end of this year, to benefit the growing disabled and senior population. The China Disabled Persons’ Federation said the coverage rate was 65 percent five years ago.

Official figures showed that authoritie­s have made headway in expanding the availabili­ty of such therapies.

More than 10 million certified disabled people received such treatments in 2019. That includes 1.1 million visually-impaired people and 5.5 million people with physical disabiliti­es, according to an annual report by the federation.

A report by the China Associatio­n of Rehabilita­tion of Disabled Persons said 88 percent of disabled people received the necessary treatment in 2019.

Zhang acknowledg­ed the achievemen­ts on Monday. However, she noted that many therapists at the grassroots level lack qualificat­ions, and the standards in the sector have yet to be ironed out, creating difficulti­es for regulating the market.

China had an estimated 85 million disabled people in 2010, the latest available data, according to the China Disabled Persons’ Federation. Experts have projected the number to be around 100 million by the end of this year, creating huge demand for rehabilita­tion services.

The need is also fueled by a fastgrayin­g demography.

China had 253 million citizens age 60 and above by the end of 2019, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. The Ministry of Civil Affairs, which oversees elder care policy, said in October that the head count will surpass 300 million in the next five years.

Among them, 40 million will be disabled or semi-disabled seniors who are usually not counted as part of the 85 million disabled population.

 ?? SHA XIAOFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A therapist helps a disabled person recover at a rehabilita­tion center in Sanya, Hainan province, in September.
SHA XIAOFENG / FOR CHINA DAILY A therapist helps a disabled person recover at a rehabilita­tion center in Sanya, Hainan province, in September.

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