The Freeman

Cancer surge in China prompts rise of special patient hotels

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BEIJING — Li Xiaohe has set herself up for the long haul in a cramped but sunny room in western Beijing, about a block from China's most renowned cancer hospital. Her laundry dries on hangers and her husband cooks in a communal kitchen as she embarks on an 84-day program of chemothera­py, following the removal of part of her right breast.

The youthful, soft-spoken 43-year-old, who works as a neighborho­od watch leader back home in Henan province, is living in one of the many so-called cancer hotels that dot the neighborho­od around the hospital, giving patients an affordable, cozy place to wait for appointmen­ts and undergo outpatient treatment.

With lung, bowel and breast cancer rates surging in China, such hotels have sprouted up in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, part of an ad hoc response to what medical experts say is a growing health crisis challengin­g an unprepared medical system.

"The treatment back home is different from here, so we came here," Li says in her bedroom, which is filled almost completely by her mattress. "At home, my insurance covers 85 percent of the cost. It'll be good if I can even get half of it covered here. But I'm doing this for my health. I'm looking for the right treatment."

These patients venture far for treatment believing they can't find adequate care in hometowns, instead preferring to camp out near reputable, big-city hospitals to await their turn for care. They do that even though government health insurance often covers less of the cost of care in Beijing and other big cities than it does back home.

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