China Daily

MOMENT OF COMPASSION

Volunteer medical teams from Beijing visited a remote township in Tibet in July as part of the China Hearts program. Liu Xiangrui reports from Nyingchi.

- Contact the writer at liuxiangru­i@chinadaily.com.cn

Despite the heat, 79-year-old Yudron was among the hundreds of local residents that lined up outside the local medical center in a remote township in the Tibet autonomous region waiting for the chance to see visiting experts from Beijing-based hospitals and medical institutio­ns.

The members of the visiting medical team were among 800 medical profession­als and volunteers from Beijing that were visiting Nyingchi city as part of an annual nine-day charity program, called “China Hearts” that sends medical volunteers to underdevel­oped and remote parts of China.

The medical team that arrived in Yuxu township early in the morning on July 9, comprised 40 doctors and volunteers, and they received nearly 800 patients, mostly Tibetans, in two days.

According to Yudron, the villagers in the neighborho­od were informed in advance that there would be free clinic services. And they knew it was an opportunit­y too good to miss.

“We were excited about it, and came to join the line immediatel­y after lunch,” says Yudron, who was given free medicines after receiving her diagnosis.

“The doctors were very profession­al and patient. I’m very satisfied with the service I received.”

Yudron says she usually visits the township’s medical center, which is just 1 kilometer away from her village, if she has any medical problems. But it can only handle small health problems, as it is relatively poorly equipped and has no well-trained doctors.

Although the county hospital has better medical facilities and doctors, it is 70 km away in Bomi — more than two hours ride on the mountain roads, Yudron says.

Because of this, she rarely visits the county hospital and the small private clinics in Bomi county for her health problems, including the problem with her digestive system that has troubled her for nearly three decades.

“It’s a lot of trouble and more costly to go to hospital in the county town. So we usually go there to buy medicine only once in a while and take the medicine back to be treated at the township medical center,” Yudron says.

Several of her family members, who are all farmers, have different kinds of health problems. The cost for medicines are still a burden for them despite favorable policies that reimburse them to some extent. The family spent more than 30,000 yuan ($4,410) on medicine last year.

The medical team visiting Yuxu also attracted many residents from villages far away from the township.

Tsedro, 29, brought his mother on his motorbike from their village, which is nearly 40 km away.

“We were informed that experts from Beijing would be holding a free clinic in the township, so we headed out early to catch it,” says Tsedro. “The doctors checked us and gave us some medicines, plus some suggestion­s for the future. It’s helpful.”

His mother has a liver disease, and Tsedro suffers from a stomach illness.

Outlining the shortage of healthcare profession­als and facilities in the area, Zhang Bin, director of Bomi county’s healthcare department, explains there are only three medical institutio­ns in Bomi, which have just 55 medical workers, while another 64 medical workers are divided among 11 township-level health centers in the county, which has a population of more than 30,000.

“We lack profession­al medical staff. Often one person has to take on multiple jobs,” explains Zhang, adding that not only do they lack enough medical staff, they also lack infrastruc­ture investment, medical facilities and funds.

He praises the “China Hearts” program, saying: “Such charitable projects not only bring us good medical services, medicine and equipment, they also help train the local medical workers.”

Doctors specializi­ng in 10 clinical areas, such as cardiovasc­ular diseases and gynecology, were among the team that visited Yuxu.

According to Hu Sanbao, director of the department of orthopedic­s of Beijing’s Anzhen Hospital, one of the volunteer doctors who visited Yuxu, residents in the region commonly suffer from such health problems as rheumatism and arthritis, as a result of the climate and the locals’ traditiona­l living environmen­t.

Under the China Hearts program, which was initiated in 2008 by medical experts and philanthro­pists in Beijing, health services are provided to underdevel­oped and remote parts of China.

A committee organizes the program each year. So far, the organizati­on has sent more than 20,000 volunteers to provide medical services to farmers and herdsmen in various regions, and the local healthcare facilities receive medicines.

In Nyingchi, medicines worth 8 million yuan were delivered to local hospitals and other medical institutio­ns.

As well, contributi­ons and donations worth over 200 million yuan have been given to the needy and nearly 10,000 local medical workers have received training over the years thanks to the program.

It is estimated that more than 500,000 people have directly benefited by the program in the past years, including nearly 1,000 children with congenital heart disease, who have undergone free surgery.

We lack profession­al medical staff. Often one person has to take on multiple jobs.” Zhang Bin, healthcare official in Bomi county, Tibet

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 ?? PHOTOS BY LIU XIANGRUI / CHINA DAILY ?? The charity program China Hearts sends medical profession­als and volunteers to Nyingchi, a remote and underdevel­oped area in the Tibet autonomous region. Doctors from Beijing offer free clinic services and medicine to local Tibetans.
PHOTOS BY LIU XIANGRUI / CHINA DAILY The charity program China Hearts sends medical profession­als and volunteers to Nyingchi, a remote and underdevel­oped area in the Tibet autonomous region. Doctors from Beijing offer free clinic services and medicine to local Tibetans.
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