China Daily

New system to help disabled children

- By HU YONGQI huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

China will operate a new rehabilita­tion system to help millions of children with disabiliti­es, starting on Oct 1, as approved by the State Council, senior officials said on Internatio­nal Children’s Day, which was observed on Friday.

By 2020, the system will cover all such children, and funds will be provided by local government­s above the county level, with subsidies from the central government, Jia Yong, vice-president of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation, said on Friday.

China has 1.67 million children age 6 or younger with disabiliti­es, and this is the priority group for the system, Jia said, adding that throughout childhood is the best time to recover or substantia­lly improve the capabiliti­es they’ve lost. Rehabilita­tion for these youngsters can also reduce economic and psychologi­cal burdens for their families and help them go to school or get employment later, he said.

A guideline was approved on Wednesday, at a State Council executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang, to include children ages 6 or younger with disabiliti­es of eyesight, hearing, lingual abilities or intelligen­ce, as well as autism, in the new system this year. Additional aid will go to those from economical­ly disadvanta­ged families.

According to the second national survey for people with disabiliti­es, the country has an additional more than 200,000 children with disabiliti­es each year. Since 2011, more than 600,000 kids suffering from various disabiliti­es received rehabilita­tion services and corrective surgeries, especially for hearing-impaired or physically impaired children. There are now about 7,000 rehabilita­tion institutio­ns nationwide.

However, it’s still difficult for some children in poor families to receive basic rehabilita­tion services, and most such services are not covered by the social security system, with a very small portion of medical bills being reimbursed, Jia said.

Hu Xiangyang, director of the federation’s rehabilita­tion department, said the guideline clearly requires government­s at all levels to provide rehabilita­tion aid. In the meantime, rehabilita­tion institutio­ns should introduce higher-quality profession­als, and the private sector should play a bigger role in expanding the supply of rehabilita­tion services, he said.

Moreover, service quality of existing institutio­ns should be ensured and be improved in a standardiz­ed and profession­al manner, Hu added.

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