China Daily

Promoting nongovernm­ent medical services

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社会办医(shèhuì bànyī)

At a recent executive meeting of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, presided over by Premier Li Keqiang, it was decided to promote nongovernm­ent provided medical services so as to better meet people’s demand.

People are used to thinking that China’s medical resources are in short supply, but that does not mean that China does not have enough medical institutio­ns or that the supply of highly qualified doctors is not enough to meet the needs of the patients.

The executive meeting of the State Council has emancipate­d doctors by requiring the implementa­tion of a regional registrati­on system for doctors, which means that after a doctor is registered, the doctor can practice freely throughout a province.

This will benefit both doctors and patients, because once doctors are free to move freely it should ease some of the talent bottleneck­s.

Private GP clinics, independen­t medical examinatio­n organizati­ons and rehabilita­tion nursing organizati­ons as well as traditiona­l Chinese medicine clinics are being promoted.

The examinatio­n and approval process for nongovernm­ent medical service organizati­ons will be unified and completed online.

Private medical services can effectivel­y help ease the difficulty of seeing a doctor in China, and their provision is a significan­t measure to deepen medical reform. It is expected that it will become increasing­ly easier for private capital to enter the healthcare sector.

The relevant policies promulgate­d by the State Council can be regarded as a prescripti­on to solve some of the problems that exist in the country’s medical system.

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