Basic healthcare for all by 2020, govt pledges
Increasing public criticism of high medical costs and a string of hospital scandals have prompted the ministry to launch the reform which involves 16 ministries and commissions including the National Development and Reform Commission.
Eight organizations - the World Health Organization, McKinsey, the World Bank, the Development Research Center of the State Council and four Chinese universities - have submitted proposals and the final plan is said to be a combination of the suggestions.
The reform covers a wide range of subjects including insurance, drug manufacturing, distribution and supervision, and legislation of medical management.
"Around 1.5 billion people will benefit from the system at that time," Gao said, factoring in the expected rise in the nation's population in the coming years.
"To this end, we will have a lot of work to do. But we are confident the goal is achievable."
Medical reforms began in the early 1990s when the system under which governments and State-run enterprises covered most medical expenses of urban Chinese was dismantled.
Medical insurance now covers most urban residents but rural dwellers have found it hard to get access to healthcare.
"I want to inform you here that the government will increase subsidies for rural people in implementing the new cooperative medical scheme," Gao said.
The rural cooperative medical insurance system, initiated in 2003 to offer farmers basic healthcare, covered 720 million rural residents, or 82.8 percent of the country's rural population, by the end of June this year, according to the Ministry of Health.
Friday, October 19, 2007
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