Wu Guixia goes to the same consulting room
in Desheng Community Health Service Center in Xicheng District, Beijing, nearly
every month.
Wu, 60, pays her monthly visit to Gao
Fengjuan, who is a general practitioner (GP) at the community health service
center. She has been Wu's family doctor for about three years.
"Dr. Gao patiently listens to my
problems, clearly explains how to take my medicine, and keeps track of my
health. It makes me feel at ease," said Wu.
Wu is one of about 600 of Gao's patients.
Gao is supported by experienced doctors from a nearby major hospital, a nurse
and a pharmacist.
Gao's practice was set up in 2012. It is now
one of seven in Desheng Community Health Service Center.
In overcrowded major hospitals, doctors are
often too busy to fully connect with patients. But in community health service
centers, with less patients, family doctors have more time for each visit.
"We family doctors pay attention to
not only residents' diseases or symptoms but also their general health
status," Gao said.
This holistic approach means that rather
than simply "treating diseases," Gao uses the power of communication,
and connection, to track the health and mental well-being of her patients.
"The customers talk with me about
their life status, families and share their experiences with me," Gao
said, "It is this relationship between patients and doctors that I value
the most."
BRIDGING GAP
Four years ago, Gao was asked to establish
"a pioneering family doctor studio."
Neither Gao nor her colleagues had the
slightest idea what a "family doctor" was. Luckily, Gao had recently
been in the U.K. to attend a GP training course at the University of Birmingham
and she was able to share her experience with her colleagues.
Many of her colleagues had worked at health
clinics across China, and so one question kept being asked; "What is so
special and different about a family doctor studio?"
Ma Pengtao is Gao's clinic partner in the
studio. She explained the main difference; "We collect detailed health
information from each customer from the very start. Then we regularly trace
their health and offer advice about how they could lead healthier lives, such
as drinking less or exercising more," Ma said.
She talked about one patient who, due to
alcohol dependency, had liver problems.
"I called him every other week to
check up on him, making sure he was eating healthily and hadn't fallen off the
wagon."
GPs are becoming the first port of call for
patients, freeing up hospitals for emergency or specialist care.
The "Healthy China 2030"
guideline, released in 2016, promised that the country's medical system will
put more focus on prevention rather than treatment. Family clinics, and doctors
like Gao, are on the front line of this fight, taking care of patients and
identifying symptoms that might have been ignored in the past.
"People would often not pay much
attention to early warning signs, and only see doctors when they had no other
option," she said.
MORE TO GO
Currently, Gao sees about 50 people a day.
Xicheng District, which was home to about 1.3 million people by the end of
2015, now has about 100 practices like Gao's,
According to the National Health and Family
Planning Commission (NHFPC), China wants 30 percent of the urban population and
60 percent of priority groups, including seniors, pregnant women and patients
with chronic diseases, covered by family practices in 2017.
The relatively low salary of family doctors
compared with specialists at major hospitals, however, remains a challenge and
must be addressed.
In Desheng Community Health Service Center,
He Zhihong, deputy director of the center, explained that its doctors are paid
bonuses related to the number of patients and their service quality.
"Every month we poll our patients
about their satisfaction with the doctors," He said. "We want those
who work better to be better paid."
Gao suggested a service fee might also be
effective.
"If a family doctor receives a service
fee from each patient, it will it generate more income and work as an
incentive," she said.
In fact, such service fee has been launched
in several areas in China.
In Xiamen in southeast China's Fujian
Province, a family doctor receives a service fee of 120 yuan (17.45 U.S.
dollars) for each patient per year, of which the customer only pays 20 yuan,
and the rest is paid by health insurance and public health service budget.
During a national health conference earlier
this month, the NHFPC chief Li Bin said the government will adjust family
doctors' service fees, increase their income and provide more opportunities for
their promotion and advancement in the years ahead.
(Source: Xinhua)