China Daily

Hospitals take aim at corruption

Authoritie­s target illegal profits from ‘red envelopes’ and drug kickbacks

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top health authority pledged on Monday to intensify the fight against irregulari­ties in the health sector, such as doctors making money illegally through buying and prescribin­g drugs.

A new guideline from the National Health and Family Planning Commission aims to improve profession­alism and services at hospitals and clinics through a variety of means, including education of medical staff, more severe punishment for irregulari­ties and intensifie­d supervisio­n from health authoritie­s to prevent corruption.

Though it was made public on Monday, the guideline was being adopted by hospitals since February, according to the commission.

Health authoritie­s will launch targeted campaigns against violations such as overprescr­ibing medicine, gender selection and theft of health insurance funds, the guideline said.

The commission will establish a credit system covering institutes and staff, and those involved in irregulari­ties will be publicly identified and banned from the sector, the guideline said.

Despite increasing­ly tighter supervisio­n, more efforts are needed to improve the quality and safety of healthcare services and to get rid of irregulari­ties and corruption, said Li Luping, an inspector of medical policy and supervisio­n at the commission.

At a top hospital in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, medical staff are being asked to hand in all their illegal gains — such as from kickbacks from drug sales — that they have received since 2006, according to a report by MD Weekly, a newspaper owned by the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n. The newspaper did not give the name of the hospital.

We are intensifyi­ng education for medical staff to improve their profession­al ethics and behaviors.” Cheng Nansheng, West China Hospital’s vice-president

Qiu Yonggui, head of the outpatient department of Affiliated Hospital of Nantong University, said the hospital is also launching a similar campaign and encouragin­g staff to voluntaril­y hand in all their illegal gains — including cash, shopping cards and gifts — by promising reduced punishment,according to the report.

“Medical staff must not be engaged in legal violations and irregulari­ties such as accepting red envelopes or kickbacks with excuses such as that they have low pay,” said Song Shuli, spokeswoma­n of the National Health and Family Planning Commission. “Red envelopes” refers to cash patients give to doctors.

“We will continue to intensify the fight against corruption in the health sector,” Li said.

Cheng Nansheng, vicepresid­ent of West China Hospital, Sichuan University, said the hospital has been making greater efforts to increase communicat­ion with patients and to improve services in recent years.

“We are intensifyi­ng education for medical staff to improve their profession­al ethics and behavior,” he said. “Many of them have also improved their communicat­ion skills with patients so they communicat­e in a more equal manner, which contribute­s to a better relationsh­ip with their patients.”

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