China is promising greater efforts to
provide comprehensive medical care across the country through further medical
reform that will benefit both urban and rural residents.
The State Council executive meeting chaired
by Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday approved two guidelines, one on improving
health care and medical service and another on efforts to forge ahead medical
reform, during the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-2020).
The new guideline on improving medical
service and health care sets out that more efforts will be made in improving
health care in the following aspects.
First, greater efforts will be made in
major disease control and treatment. The government will make more efforts in
better preventing major chronic diseases and illnesses such as hypertension,
diabetes, stroke, as well as major contagious and mental diseases. The
government will encourage more nursery training, especially in caring for the
elderly, children and pay more attention to tackling mental disease.
Second, medical competence at the
grassroots level is to be enhanced with more medical resources delivered to
lower tier institutions. It also calls for improving treatment for the elderly,
people with disabilities and poverty-stricken families.
Third, approval procedures for new and
urgently needed medicine will be simplified. Internet Plus health care will be
more widely applied across the country to make medical services immediately
reachable.
More incentive will be provided to the
needs of families with two children. The guideline also emphasized developing
the health industry while encouraging more social investment to the sector.
"It is important to encourage related
departments and governments at all levels to take the initiative in implementation,"
he said, emphasizing that some obligatory targets in the guideline should be
laid out based on sound evaluation.
Guideline in deepening China's medical
reform in the coming five years was also approved on Wednesday. A set of
measures will be implemented. Medical consultation through family doctors will
be encouraged, and the government will pilot the ongoing hierarchical medical
system in 85 percent of regions around China. The guideline also encourages
wider range of medical resource sharing. The government will give strict price
control on medical equipment and medicines while better encourage medical
services and consultations. The guideline has set the goal that by 2017,
reimbursement on hospitalization fee will be realized across different regions
and provinces.
More improvements will be made in the
country's medicine supply system, and the government will ensure the supply of
low-price medicine, children's medicine, as well as some urgently demanded
medicine.
"In terms of medical reform, we need
to concentrate on areas of people's concerns, and work harder in reducing high
quality medical resources concentration in major cities, and make them more
available to the public," Li said.
"The medical system needs to be
lowered down, and administrative fragmentation needs to be broken to better
serve public needs for medical service and cost reimbursement," Li
stressed.
Health and medical care stays on top of the
government's priority, as Premier Li pointed out in this year's government work
report that "health is the root for people's happiness." He has
stressed on many occasions on the importance of medical reform.
"We should continue to provide a
sustainable healthcare system that matches our national conditions, so that all
people can enjoy better medical service at lower cost," Li has said.
China has recorded impressive achievements
in improving medical and health care in the past five years.
Figures from the National Health and Family
Planning Commission showed that average life expectancy in China reached 76.34
years old in 2015. Infant mortality rate decreased to 8.1 from 13.1 per 1,000
infants in 2010.
(Source: Xinhua)