China Daily

Prospects bright for dialogue on health

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Prospects are bright for health cooperatio­n among BRICS nations as they work to help their combined population of 3 billion people, China’s top health official told health ministers from the group at a major gathering in Tianjin in July.

Over the past seven years, health cooperatio­n among the five countries has become more extensive, Li Bin, minister of China’s Health and Family Planning Commission, said at the BRICS Health Ministers Meeting.

The first such gathering, which marked the beginning of BRICS health cooperatio­n, was held in July 2011 in Beijing. Since then, cooperatio­n has expanded and intensifie­d, Li said.

During this year’s meeting, the BRICS nations — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — pledged to intensify the integratio­n of traditiona­l Chinese medicine in their national healthcare systems to improve healthcare services.

The meeting has been held annually, rotating among the five countries.

The BRICS countries selected priority areas for cooperatio­n at each of the past six meetings, including intensifyi­ng health monitoring; conducting research on tuberculos­is, AIDS and malaria; and researchin­g new drugs, according to the National Health and Family Planning Commission.

“Diseases do not stop at borders,” Vice-Premier Liu Yandong said at this year’s meeting. “The BRICS countries have establishe­d highlevel dialogues to cope with common health challenges and promote health cooperatio­n.”

She noted that member countries have contribute­d to more than 50 percent of the world’s total economic growth over the past decade.

In the same period, the countries have extended their health cooperatio­n from traditiona­l areas — including disease monitoring, prevention and control — to new areas such as digital healthcare, she said.

The five countries have also actively promoted health cooperatio­n with other nations.

For example, China has been sending medical experts to other developing countries to provide healthcare services, and has provided assistance to Africa in building disease control and prevention systems, she said.

“Facing severe health challenges complicate­d by problems such as accelerate­d population aging and the increasing number of crossborde­r immigrants, the internatio­nal society needs to work together to promote universal health,” Liu said.

“China is looking forward to working with other BRICS nations to promote health cooperatio­n that will benefit more people.”

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