China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Boy’s death triggers scrutiny of care center

- By CHEN MENG and WEI XING YI in Beijing

The death of an autistic teenager at a care center has triggered nationwide debate and a top-level administra­tive move to conduct tighter checks on such service providers.

The Ministry of Civil Affairs said on Tuesday it has issued an urgent circular ordering nationwide inspection­s of care services provided by the government or outsourced to the private sector.

Civil affairs authoritie­s at all levels should check the qualificat­ions, facilities, services and safety management of all care services entrusted by the government, the document said.

It also called for the immediate terminatio­n of services that do not pass inspection, as well as proper arrangemen­ts for those receiving care from such services. Those violating laws and regulation­s will be held accountabl­e and subject to strict punishment.

The move came amid heated discussion of the death of Lei Wenfeng, a 15-year-old who got lost and stayed more than a month in the Lianxi care agency in Shaoguan, Guangdong province, before he died in December. Local authoritie­s have not disclosed the cause of death, but they said the case was being investigat­ed.

The person in charge of the center has been detained for further investigat­ion, according to China Central Television.

Twenty people died in the center, which cares for people of all ages, during a 49-day period in January and February, Beijing News reported.

A spokeswoma­n for the Ministry of Civil Affairs said the local government is looking into the exact number of deaths at the Lianxi center as well as the causes and will publish the investigat­ion report “without delay”.

Yue Jinglun, a public affairs professor at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong, said the government should reconsider what kinds of public services should be outsourced.

“Not every penny spent by the government should be efficiency-driven,” he said.

“The shelter service and

similar services, for many underdogs, are essentiall­y the last resort. Some social responsibi­lities are better assumed by the government.”

Yue added that if the government deemed a certain service fit to be outsourced to a third party, it should figure out ways to follow up on the project — such as sending regular or random inspection teams, keeping track of themoney spent and setting up pragmatic standards that can be evaluated — to make sure the entrusted organizati­ons are doing their job properly.

“When it involves life, freedom and security, fairness trumps efficiency,” Yue said.

“It takes profession­als with good hearts to fulfill such missions. Not every NGO qualifies.”

Dou Yixin, founder of the Quiet Whisperers’ Community, a Beijingbas­ed NGO dedicated to helping children with autism, said parents could do more to prevent such tragedies.

“A simple location tracking device will help a lot. At least you will know where your child is. It costs little,” he said.

“I’ve repeated this suggestion time and again to many parents, but their first response would be, ‘Oh, my child will feel uncomforta­ble wearing it’ or ‘The tracker must be radioactiv­e’.

“I saw more than 100 cases of lost autistic children inmy friends’ circle in just a year, yet the parents just don’t realize how much a simple change can help.”

Dou said that in 2011, his center received nine children with autism from a foster care agency in Shanxi province.

At that time, he used his own money to run the center and provided everything for free.

When the children arrived, he said, “they were starved to basically a bag of bones. ... They needed my free profession­al skills to take care of the kids. After half a year, they gained much weight and became more relaxed and happy.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States