China Daily

Medical disputes, related crimes on decline

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

Medical disputes and medical-related crimes are under control, with the number of cases having significan­tly dropped in the past five years, the National Health Commission said on Friday.

Medical disputes have decreased 20.1 percent since 2013, and medical-related crimes have declined 41.1 percent during the same period, according to Guo Yanhong, deputy director of the commission’s medical administra­tion bureau.

Last year, outpatient department­s in the country’s hospitals witnessed more than 8.1 billion visits, while inpatient department­s received more than 240 million patients.

“With people’s increasing needs for better medical services, both our treatment skills and service qualities have improved. But there are still some unknowns in medicine that may lead to conflicts between people’s high expectatio­ns and the limits of medical science,” Guo said.

Since 2013, the commission has worked with several other department­s, including the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Justice, and launched pilot projects in 11 provinces and municipali­ties to draft regional laws or regulation­s to prevent and treat medical disputes and crimes.

Statistics from the commission­s showed that 85 percent of the highest-level hospitals in the country have a special department to handle medical disputes.

About 60 percent of all disputes have been solved through mediation in recent years. Moreover, about 110,000 hospitals had purchased insurance, which reduced the financial burden of medical compensati­on.

Jiangsu province released a provincial medical disputes management regulation in March last year, which emphasized the importance of dispute prevention and recommende­d mediation be attempted before using the dispute management regulation.

“We trained a profession­al team to conduct mediation work and encouraged local people to buy medical accident insurance. Both achieved successful outcomes with 80 percent of major disputes being solved through mediation,” said Zhang Jinhong, director of Jiangsu Health Commission’s medical reform department.

In June, a regulation on the prevention and settlement of medical disputes was passed at a State Council executive meeting. It will be enforced starting Oct 1.

Under the regulation, medical institutes and their staff are asked to put patients first, giving them humane care, and medical institutes should enhance training on related laws and profession­al ethics.

A mechanism should be establishe­d to divide responsibi­lities among government department­s, according to the regulation.

“The regulation is patient-oriented and is expected to protect the legitimate interests of medical staff and patients,” said Shen Weixing, dean of Tsinghua University’s School of Law.

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