China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Treat doctors fairly to curb medical graft

The average salary doctors get is less than what they deserve given the time and energy they put in to earn a medical degree ...

- The author is a writer with China Daily. zhangzhoux­iang@ chinadaily.com.cn

Asmall box of medicines to treat coryza costs 129 yuan ($18.6). If you think the price is not high, consider this: Of that amount, a medicine salesperso­n pays a kickback of 45 yuan to the doctor so that he/she prescribes it to patients.

This is part of the facts to emerge from an investigat­ion by China Central TV journalist­s in a reputable hospital in Shanghai. The journalist­s stayed in the hospital for days and also video-recorded how medicine salesperso­ns bribed doctors.

As soon as the news broke out, theNationa­lHealth and Family Planning Commission said it would ask the local health authoritie­s to investigat­e the case and take measures to prevent the spread of bribery. Later, the ShanghaiMu­nicipalHea­lth and Family Planning Commission suspended the three doctors who were caught on camera taking bribes, and said it will strengthen the supervisio­n of doctors.

Strengthen­ed supervisio­n is necessary, because doctors have the absolute say in the treatment of diseases. If doctors use this power to treat diseases without supervisio­n and if they prescribe medicines according to their interests, not the patients’ needs, they will increase the monetary burden of patients and harm their health.

Yet supervisio­n alone is not enough. The average salary doctors get is less than what they deserve given the time and energy they put in to earn a medical degree, not to mention specializa­tion in a field.

The prescripti­on fee for public hospitals is strictly controlled: About 14 yuan for an experience­d doctor in Beijing, just enough to buy a box of chewing gum. And since medical resources are rath- er rare, illegal agencies make appointmen­ts with doctors to “resell” them for as high as 1,000 yuan per appointmen­t. When doctors have to sell labor at an unreasonab­ly low price and watch illegal agencies making profit, why will they not try to increase their incomes?

We are confident that the NationalHe­alth and Family Planning Commission will take effective measures to curb corruption in hospitals. But if the commission only strengthen­s supervisio­n without promoting medical reform and raising doctors’ salaries, we may face a shortage of good doctors as fewwould agree to do the risky, exhausting but poorly-paying job.

In fact, we may be staring at such a scenario, as the minimum cut-off score for admission to medical colleges fell in 2015 and 2016 because of dropping applicant numbers.

Fortunatel­y, the country’s top leadership has noticed this. A guideline on medical reform, which the State Council, or China’s Cabinet, issued inMarch said the salaries of medical staff should be raised and the pioneering hospitals were already working on the newplan.

Hopefully, the reform will be expedited and doctors will be treated more fairly.

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