South China Morning Post

CUT IN MATERNITY BEDS AS BIRTH RATE DECLINES

At least 11 public hospitals have suspended or cancelled delivery services since June last year, with the profession warning of an ‘obstetrics winter’

- Phoebe Zhang phoebe.zhang@scmp.com

Professor Duan Tao began his career more than 30 years ago during a “golden era” for the field of obstetrics in China. But now he and his colleagues face an “obstetrics winter” as the country struggles with a falling birth rate.

It is something that has recently seen a spate of maternity ward closures, and has even reached the point of the National Health Commission (NHC) stepping in to ensure pregnant women are provided for.

Back when Duan first began working as an obstetrici­an, the number of births rose every year – as did the number of doctors – and their research was internatio­nally recognised, he wrote on Weibo in February.

“But now, births have been decreasing every year, beds have been cut back, and more and more doctors have had to change profession. But what can they do?” he wrote, jokingly suggesting that they become vets. “Save obstetrics!” he pleaded on Weibo.

Duan, who is director of the maternity ward at Shanghai No 1 Maternity Hospital, sent out his recent plea during an online discussion of the “obstetrics winter” China is facing.

Since June last year, at least 11 public hospitals have suspended or entirely cancelled their delivery services, according to media reports. These range from smaller local clinics, such as the Dongqiao County Health Centre in Putian, Fujian province, which serviced a town of around 120,000 people, to major centres, such as the Guangzhou Xinzao Hospital. On top of that, numerous private hospitals and postnatal care centres have also shut down.

Those still operating are struggling with a significan­tly lower number of patients. One obstetrici­an in Shenzhen, who wished to remain anonymous, said business was definitely not thriving, unlike how things used to be.

“A few years ago, those who wanted to give birth at our hospital had to go through a lottery system,” she said.

The closure of maternity services has been so pronounced that the NHC put out a notice recently setting a hard target, demanding every county had at least one public medical institute that offered delivery services.

“When public hospitals shut down their maternity ward, they need to first check with pregnant women who registered with them,” the notice read. “The public’s right to medical services must be ensured.”

It called for hospitals to not pressure their maternity wards to make money, but still make sure their obstetrici­ans were not paid less than doctors in other department­s.

The closure of maternity wards – and the kindergart­en closures which preceded it – is the latest casualty of the historical­ly low birth rate China is grappling with. Last year, only about 9 million babies were born – the lowest level since records began in 1949, and the seventh consecutiv­e year of decline.

There are prediction­s of a small rebound this year, according to demographe­r He Yafu, mainly from people who put off having children during Covid-19, as well as last year’s newlyweds, but he expected the main trend to remain unchanged in the long run.

“In order to increase the birth rate, we have to increase the marriage rate,” he wrote in a January article on WeChat. “The local government­s need to issue effective policies to encourage marriage and childbirth.”

The central government has been attempting to do just that, scrambling to offer incentives targeting young people.

In the past few months, it called for them to have frugal weddings, organised group ceremonies, and issued tax cuts and housing subsidies for families with multiple children.

But these measures are of little use. Young women today often discuss the tribulatio­ns of marriage and childbirth. In one feminist WeChat group the Post saw, women talk about the physical pain of giving birth, the lack of support from partners and the amount of housework to be done.

“When I think about getting married, I feel like my life is over,” one said.

Besides the falling birth rate, maternity wards already face financial burdens associated with the services they have to offer, including a 24-hour on-call team and expensive equipment, according to Julie Wang, an obstetrici­an in Nanjing.

In order to make this basic service accessible to pregnant women across China, local government­s often set official price ceilings for births. In one document from Zhejiang province in 2023, the cost of a natural delivery was priced at 900 yuan (HK$993), and a caesarean section at 1,488 yuan.

“Maternity wards are always broke,” Wang said. “The hospital invests a lot, but the ward doesn’t make money in return.”

Duan wrote that the practice was in a “downward spiral with no end in sight”. “The government has all these policies encouragin­g births … but without delivery wards and obstetrici­ans, who will deliver your baby?” he asked.

 ?? Photo: Getty Images ?? Amid the country’s population crisis, hospitals have been urged not to pressure their maternity wards to make money.
Photo: Getty Images Amid the country’s population crisis, hospitals have been urged not to pressure their maternity wards to make money.

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