China Daily

Legal changes for doctors require prompt alerts

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

Doctors must report cases of infectious diseases, emergency cases of diseases with unknown causes and abnormal health incidents as soon as they are identified, according to draft amendments to a law submitted to China’s top legislatur­e for deliberati­on on Wednesday.

The draft amendments to the Law on Licensed Doctors was formulated by borrowing on China’s successful experience in the prevention and control of the COVID19 epidemic, said Liu Qian, deputy director of the National People’s Congress’ Education, Science, Culture and Public Health Committee.

The draft also stipulates that doctors must follow orders from health authoritie­s dispatchin­g them to other places in emergencie­s or national defense mobilizati­ons.

Doctors must follow profession­al ethics, including acquiring consent from patients or their close relatives before conducting medical research or clinical trials, according to the draft.

Those who breach these obligation­s will receive punishment ranging from warnings or suspension from practicing medicine to revocation of their licenses. They may be held criminally liable in serious cases.

The government should ensure the legitimate rights of doctors, including creating a good environmen­t for them to practice medicine and take effective measures to prevent and fight legal violations targeting doctors, the draft said.

“The draft amendments have further clarified the rights and obligation­s of doctors, including conducting scientific research on the basis of law and regulation­s and ethical norms, and reporting dis eases with unknown causes,” said Deng Liqiang, director for legal affairs at the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n.

The requiremen­t to report infectious diseases, emergency cases of diseases with unknown causes and health incidents promptly is a sign of progress, he said, because the existing Law on Licensed Doctors only requires doctors to report epidemics of infectious diseases to hospitals or health authoritie­s.

“The regulation will help the identifica­tion of new infectious diseases as soon as possible, and will better protect people’s lives and health,” Deng said.

Meanwhile, it is natural that doctors, as profession­als engaged in public service, should follow the directions of authoritie­s to save lives in case of emergency, he said.

Mass mobilizati­on of doctors and nurses played a key role in the containmen­t of the COVID-19 epidemic in Wuhan, Hubei province, early last year. Some 43,000 medical volunteers from across China were dispatched to Hubei to aid local medical workers treating COVID-19 patients.

The regulation will help the identifica­tion of new infectious diseases as soon as possible, and will better protect people’s lives and health.”

Deng Liqiang, director for legal affairs at the Chinese Medical Doctor Associatio­n

 ?? CHEN LI / XINHUA ?? Villager Fang Linfang (center) shows a doctor where she feels pain via the internet in Dawan village deep in the Dabie Mountains in Lu’an, Anhui province, last month. With the help of Yuan Ling (left), a village doctor, more than 10 villagers received treatment from experts at Lu’an People’s Hospital in the city. The village opened the online service in 2019.
CHEN LI / XINHUA Villager Fang Linfang (center) shows a doctor where she feels pain via the internet in Dawan village deep in the Dabie Mountains in Lu’an, Anhui province, last month. With the help of Yuan Ling (left), a village doctor, more than 10 villagers received treatment from experts at Lu’an People’s Hospital in the city. The village opened the online service in 2019.

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