Attention

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not represent our advertisers

Saturday, April 04, 2015

What China Can Teach The World About Successful Health Care

Over the past six decades, China has been experimenting with radically different forms of health care systems.

As the country struggles to figure out the best way to get health care to 1.3 billion people, the rest of the world can learn from its past successes and failures, researcherswrote Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Back in 1949, health care was free to everyone in China. The communist state operated all clinics and hospitals, and it employed all doctors, nurses and health workers.

Then in 1984, the government started implementing free-market reforms. People lost their free medical care. And by 1999, only 7 percent of those living in rural regions had health insurance.

Hospitals began to act like for-profit companies. Doctors and nurses were often rewarded for increasing hospital profits. So they started acting like entrepreneurs.

To patients, it seemed like everyone was just out to make a buck — or a yuan. And the public became increasingly angry and distrustful of doctors.

In 2008, the government began to abandon a system based largely on free-market principles and made a commitment to providing affordable health care for all by 2020. About 95 percent of the population had health insurance in 2012.

More

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Doesn't it seem odd that far left countries are moving right and vis versa. Should work well in a "global economic environment ". Aka. New World order. All out of tin foil and patience.

Anonymous said...

this country had a great health care system that took care of everybody until the government got involved and this was in the last 30 years

Anonymous said...

well one child for starters might not be a bad idea for some in our society!
Think obummer could start there?