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CHANGES IMPROVE EFFICIENCY OF FAMILY PLANNING SERVICES Department­al mergers help officials to redefine their roles

- By WANG XIAODONG in Guiyang

For most of her 13 years as a grassroots family planning officer, Wang Wanhui’s main task has been to discourage her fellow villagers from having more children than the law allowed. Now, her role is changing. “Before the universal second-child policy was adopted in 2016, my job was to emphasize pregnancy management and population control,” said Wang, who works in Longjing, a village in the township of Dongfeng in Guiyang, capital of Guizhou province.

“Women who had already given birth had to use contracept­ive measures, such as intrauteri­ne devices, and we asked them to have checkups every three months to make sure the devices were intact.”

Wang’s work priorities began to change several years ago in response to the gradual relaxation of the family planning policy. However, the biggest change came in early 2016.

“The adoption of the second-child policy saw the number of births rise markedly, so the major task of family planning workers in our town became the provision of healthcare services for pregnant women, especially in high-risk cases, to ensure their safety,” she said.

Sixteen women in Long jing got pregnant in 2016, but last year the number was 26, including two high-risk cases: a 35-year-old, and a woman who had previously given birth via a cesarean section, making her vulnerable to complicati­ons such as a ruptured womb or premature birth.

“I spend most of my time keeping track of pregnant women who are close to giving birth, reminding them to visit the health center in Dongfeng for checkups and asking them to come to my office to pick up free doses of folic acid,” Wang said. Folic acid can help prevent neural tube defects.

“I also help them to register online so they can get benefits such as free checkups and higher reimbursem­ent for certain services during and after pregnancy. My workload is heavy because the village doctor and I are the only people available for the whole village, and we would face disciplina­ry proceeding­s if someone died during pregnancy or childbirth.”

Wang is one of about 200 family planning officials in Guiyang’s Wudang district whose roles have been transforme­d. They have started to focus more heavily on working with colleagues to provide maternal healthcare services to suit the universal secondchil­d policy.

For more than three decades, the primary task of family planning officers was to prevent unauthoriz­ed births via the promotion and use of contracept­ion, according to Qin Desheng, deputy director of Wudang’s bureau of health and family planning.

However, that began to change a few years ago as the national family planning policy was gradually relaxed.

The merger of the district’s family planning and health department­s resulted in family planning officers being integrated with other health workers, especially those at the grassroots.

“The effect of the secondchil­d policy in Wudang can be seen clearly, with nearly 4,000 births expected by the end of the year,” Qin said, speaking in December.

“By comparison, in 2016, the total number of births in the district was about 2,000. Many couples who already had one child delayed having a second until the universal secondchil­d policy was implemente­d,” he added.

Qin noted that some rural couples, such as those whose only child was a girl, were allowed to have two children in the hope the second would be a boy, which would help to maintain the workforce.

As in many other parts of China, a large number of the women in Wudang who plan to have a second child are considered to be at high risk — for example, those ages 40 and older — so improving health management has become a key task for the district’s health and family planning officials.

“While village doctors provide purely medical care, family planning officials have other functions,” Qin said.

“They have close contact with villagers over many years, and as a result they establish a vast informatio­n network at the grassroots. For example, they can provide useful informatio­n about pregnant women, and also help those who plan to have a second child to have a pre-pregnancy checkup. When the universal second-child policy was implemente­d, many of our family planning workers were puzzled and did not know what their new jobs would entail. We believe they still have a role to play, and we have arranged training programs so they can provide a better service.”

Promoting contracept­ion

Qin said some couples want to have more than two babies in violation of the law, so the district’s family planning officers have maintained some of their traditiona­l duties, such as promoting awareness of contracept­ion, distributi­ng free contracept­ive pills and devices, and fining people who break the law.

Lu Shiyuan has been engaged in family planning in two villages in Dongfeng, the township under the jurisdicti­on of Wudang, since 2003. He has seen a lot of changes during the past 14 years.

“Unlike our current role as service providers, back in 2003, we were like the residents’ managers and our priority was to prevent illegal births,” he said. “At the time, villagers who planned to have a child had to go through a number of registrati­on procedures with the local government.”

For Lu, the changes really gained momentum in 2014, when the national family planning policy was relaxed. The new regulation­s allowed couples to have a second child if one partner was the only child in their family. In response, local government­s simplified the registrati­on procedures to adapt to the change, including making it easier for people to register via computers or smartphone­s, he said.

Lu and his colleagues have relocated from their old office to the health center in Dongfeng so they can better assist the doctors and nurses and provide health management for women who are pregnant, have recently given birth, or are planning to have a baby, he added.

Complicate­d procedures

In 2012, when his wife gave birth to their first child, Zhao Ping, a Dongfeng native who owns a grocery store in Guiyang, had to return to the township to complete the birth registrati­on forms.

“The procedures were very complicate­d back then, and we had to collect or fill in a lot of forms, including our marriage certificat­e, a letter from the local hospital confirming that my wife was pregnant and a letter from the local authoritie­s certifying that my wife and I did not already have a child,” he said.

He was pleased that the procedures were simplified in 2016 because he will not have to travel to Dongfeng to register if he and his wife have another child.

Instead, he will only need to enter their personal informatio­n, such as names, ID numbers and place of household registrati­on, on the local government’s website.

The change implemente­d by the family planning services in Guizhou is a microcosm of the transforma­tion that has happened nationally, which is estimated to have affected nearly 1 million family planning officials, according to a national survey in 2015.

The number of family planning officers has remained unchanged since then, despite the relaxation of the family planning policy, according to

The effect of the second-child policy in Wudang can be seen clearly, with nearly 4,000 births expected (in 2017).” Qin Desheng, deputy director of Wudang’s bureau of health and family planning, speaking in December

the commission, which said the officials have been integrated with health workers at the grassroots across the country.

For example, family planning officials in Gansu province are also actively engaged in the provision of services such as health education, disease control and prevention, and poverty alleviatio­n.

Meanwhile, many provinces have streamline­d their administra­tive procedures so people can receive a wide range of services, including birth registrati­on, maternal and child healthcare and child vaccinatio­ns, by producing a single certificat­e instead of the large number of documents required before.

Yuan Xin, a professor of population studies in Nankai University in Tianjin, said family planning officers will now be expected to focus more on providing healthcare services, but the authoritie­s will need to provide training during the transition period.

“The family planning workers are familiar with reproducti­ve health, but most lack sufficient knowledge of overall healthcare, including amended or new policies and technologi­es,” he said.

“A number of training programs must be arranged to allow the workers to provide a more diverse range of healthcare.”

 ?? ZHOU KE / XINHUA ?? A family planning officer explains a healthcare pamphlet to a pregnant woman in Zhengang, Jiangxi province
ZHOU KE / XINHUA A family planning officer explains a healthcare pamphlet to a pregnant woman in Zhengang, Jiangxi province
 ?? LIU XIAO / XIHUA ?? A woman collects medication prescribed after a free checkup as part of a “Healthy Mother” program launched by Langao county in Shaanxi province.
LIU XIAO / XIHUA A woman collects medication prescribed after a free checkup as part of a “Healthy Mother” program launched by Langao county in Shaanxi province.
 ?? ZHAO YUGUO / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Villagers undergo checks for cervical and breast cancer at the family planning office in Liaocheng city, Shandong province.
ZHAO YUGUO / FOR CHINA DAILY Villagers undergo checks for cervical and breast cancer at the family planning office in Liaocheng city, Shandong province.

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