China Daily

Mine safety, health scams and false data targeted

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Several ministry-level department­s, including the National Coal Mine Safety Administra­tion, State Administra­tion for Market Regulation and the National Health Commission, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

Regulation limits number of workers at coal mines

The National Coal Mine Safety Administra­tion said on Wednesday that it has issued a regulation limiting the number of workers working in a single shift at coal mines.

The regulation, which divides coal mines into seven tiers based on production capacity, stipulates that the number of workers working in a single shift at coal mines where work safety risks are high cannot exceed 850. The limit for other coal mines is 450.

The regulation, which will take effect this month, also imposes limits on the number of workers in individual work units at coal mines.

The administra­tion said coal mine enterprise­s will be required to make their production plan in accordance with the regulation, and local authoritie­s should step up safety checks.

Coal mines that fail to abide by the regulation will not receive approval to increase their production capacity. Those that do not meet its requiremen­ts in 2021 will be closed, the administra­tion said.

Crackdown on health product scams launched

China’s market regulator said on Wednesday that it has launched a nationwide campaign to crack down on wrongdoing in the health product market.

The three-month campaign was launched by the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation together with 12 other central government department­s.

The administra­tion said that during the campaign, law enforcemen­t officers will focus on food, equipment, daily necessitie­s, small home electrical appliances, wearable articles and service producers that claim to promote health. Violations such as false advertisin­g, the sale of counterfei­t and low-quality products and illegal direct selling and pyramid selling will be targeted.

The move follows the launch of an investigat­ion last month into Quanjian Nature Medicine Technology Developmen­t, a health product company based in Tianjin, that was accused in an online report of making exaggerate­d claims in advertisem­ents and being involved in a pyramid scheme. After the investigat­ion by local authoritie­s, 18 suspects, including the chairman and founder of Quanjian, were detained on suspicion of organizing a pyramid scheme and engaging in false advertisin­g.

Statistics bureau takes aim at falsificat­ion of data

The National Bureau of Statistics will step up efforts to prevent and punish the falsificat­ion of data and other fraudulent practices in an effort to ensure the authentici­ty of data, the bureau’s head, Ning Jizhe, said on Thursday.

Ning said the bureau will launch a supervisio­n campaign targeting statistica­l work this year to punish illegal practices and improve the quality of statistics.

It will enhance inspection and law enforcemen­t, expand the exposure of wrongdoers and hold them accountabl­e, Ning said at a national work conference.

There were 27 illegal statistica­l cases exposed around the country last year, and 118 firms found guilty of serious doctoring of data were punished.

China introduced an updated detailed guideline for implementi­ng statistics laws in 2017 to prevent data fraud.

2020 target date for better hospitals in poor regions

China will step up poverty alleviatio­n efforts in the healthcare sector and ensure all medical institutio­ns at various levels in impoverish­ed areas reach set standards by 2020, a National Health Commission spokesman said on Thursday.

As part of poverty reduction efforts, high-level hospitals will help their county-level counterpar­ts in poor regions build up their talent, and each township-level institutio­n will have one general practition­er by 2020, spokesman Hu Qiangqiang said.

The commission will make efforts to ensure that telemedici­ne services cover all township-level hospitals in poor regions. Breast and cervical cancer screening for women living in rural areas and screening for newborns in poor areas will see further progress, he said.

More incentives will be offered to medical profession­als working at grassroots-level hospitals, and individual­s who are impoverish­ed by major or chronic diseases will receive greater compensati­on, Hu said.

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