311 counties to pilot China’s hospital reform

Local government workers receive families of the injured in a hospital after a bus plunged into a ravine from a viaduct in a section of an expressway in Xiapu County of Ningde City, southeast China's Fujian Province, June 20, 2012. <File photo=Xinhua>

BEIJING, June 26 (Xinhua) — China has nominated 311 counties or county-level cities in a program to pilot reform of the country’s public healthcare facilities, the Ministry of Health announced on Tuesday.

The national initiative includes 83 counties or county-level cities in east China, 136 in central China and 92 in west China, according to the ministry.

The 311 counties or county-level cities are expected to undergo reforms in finance, management and human resources by 2015 to enhance their capacity.

The ministry asked the counties to each set up their own leading group to guide the reform, and collect data and submit reports to upper-level health authorities to generate experience for future reform of major public hospitals in cities.

According to a guideline published earlier in June by the State Council, or Cabinet, the pilot program plans to wipe out the existing financing mechanism of Chinese hospitals relying heavily on medicine sales while their services are undervalued.

County hospitals are known as the backbone of the country’s health care network in rural areas, and directly serve over 900 million Chinese. Rural patients, however, tend to flood into major hospitals in cities to seek better quality services.

The program has set a goal of restoring people’s trust in county-level medical facilities and serving 90 percent of all the patients within each county.

 

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