China Daily

Subsidies improve access to assistive devices for disabled, seniors

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn Yan Zhongqian contribute­d to this story.

Lozang Dawa, who lost his left leg in a car crash in 2016, never thought about getting a prosthetic leg until recently.

The 32-year-old, who lives in a rural part of Lhasa, capital of Xizang autonomous region, said he did not dare learn what one cost, fearing that only being able to dream about it would add to his family’s financial strains.

“I was overwhelme­d with grief and a sense of self-abasement after the accident,” he said, adding that he used to be his family’s sole breadwinne­r, working as a porter with a logistics company, but his younger sisters had since taken over that role.

Earlier this year, Lozang Dawa became one of the first beneficiar­ies of a regionwide program to compensate people for the full cost of up to 140 assistive items, ranging from hearing aids and wheelchair­s to digital solutions such as screenread­ing software.

In the course of a week, the ethnic Tibetan registered for the program, was measured and joined a rehabilita­tion training session for potential prosthetic leg users. Once it was fitted, his newfound ease of movement quickly helped him land a job with a local internet service provider that is expanding rapidly as China bolsters digital infrastruc­ture in remote areas.

“My job abates the financial burden, and it also makes me more confident, independen­t,” he said.

The China Disabled Persons’ Federation said this month that the Xizang program is experiment­ing with a trial period to provide full coverage for 140 types of devices that fall into six disability categories, making Xizang the last provincial-level jurisdicti­on on the Chinese mainland to subsidize assistive devices. Such products are widely viewed as crucial in helping disabled people and older adults navigate various degrees of physical dysfunctio­n and lead independen­t, dignified lives.

The federation said disabled individual­s with Xizang hukou — residency documents — are eligible to apply for the subsidy. Residents age 65 and older, who often have various degrees of disability but do not hold certificat­es issued to disabled people, can also apply.

According to the World Health Organizati­on, more than 2.5 billion people worldwide need one or more assistive products, and with an aging global population and a rise in chronic diseases, an estimated 3.5 billion people will need them by 2050. But the WHO said that in many countries most people in need do not have access to such products.

China has an estimated 85 million disabled people who are prone to poverty due to limited employment opportunit­ies, and about 40 million seniors wrestle with some form of physical dysfunctio­n, according to government data.

The subsidy was first rolled out in Shanghai in 2003, with Beijing following suit in 2010. Between 2016 and 2020, a crucial period for the national antipovert­y campaign, nine provincial-level jurisdicti­ons began to offer subsidies, and the rest of the country raced to roll out such programs in the years that followed.

With the exception of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, jurisdicti­ons have formulated catalogs of assistive devices eligible for compensati­on, and the compensati­on prioritize­s those with financial difficulti­es, such as recipients of subsistenc­e allowances and the jobless.

The lack of a list in Inner Mongolia means that applicatio­ns there must be verified on a case-by-case basis, which takes longer.

Fourteen jurisdicti­ons, including Tianjin, and the provinces of Shanxi, Jilin and Jiangsu, provide full coverage to listed products.

Beneficiar­ies said such devices are crucial in helping them improve their quality of life, increase their independen­ce, and enhance their ability to participat­e in various activities at home, at work, and in the community.

Liu Jian, 40, was diagnosed as being deaf at age 3, a possible outcome of a serious allergic reaction involving penicillin. His workingcla­ss parents wanted to buy him a hearing aid but could not afford one because it cost about 10 times his father’s monthly salary.

An early beneficiar­y of the subsidy, he said the rolling out of the policy had eased the financial stress. Hearing aids now cost about 8,000 yuan ($1,200) and they need to be updated every few years.

“Without the policy, the financial pressure would be enormous,” Liu said. “But without a hearing aid, I would have problems making phone calls.”

In recent years, jurisdicti­ons including Beijing and Shaanxi province have unveiled websites where applicants can browse products and place orders, with prices reduced by the subsidy. That saves buyers the trouble of paying full price upfront and claiming compensati­on later.

Guo Yuanyuan, a Beijing resident who is paralyzed from the waist down, spent 30,000 yuan in 2018 on a sports wheelchair. The 39-yearold, who now works for a nonprofit group, paid the full price because such wheelchair­s were not included in the catalog at the time.

The website now serves as a showcase of the latest technologi­es, and she browses it occasional­ly to check for updated versions of sports wheelchair­s.

“I have been following a sports wheelchair listed at 10,000 yuan on the website,” Guo said. “That is about 3,000 yuan cheaper than if I buy it elsewhere.”

She said most brand-name products on the website were listed at steeply discounted prices as a result of negotiatio­ns between the authoritie­s and manufactur­ers.

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