China's vice health minister on Tuesday said 5,519 medical
personnel were injured in medical disputes last year as patients'
families and friends became more likely to use violence to vent
their rage over hospital errors.
"The number of violent disputes has been on the rise in recent
years, as misdiagnosis and operation frauds repeatedly occurred in
some local hospitals and clinics," Chen Xiaohong said at a two-day
national public security meeting which ended Tuesday in Xi'an,
capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
A total of 9,831 attacks stemming from medical disputes were
reported in 2006, damaging hospital facilities worth more than 200
million yuan (US$25.6 million), a sharp rise from 5,093 violent
cases and 67 million yuan of losses in 2002, Chen said.
About 2,600 medical personnel were hurt in 2002.
"Some doctors complain that they feel very insecure and are
afraid to conduct operations that might have relatively bigger
risks," Chen said, acknowledging that hospitals are short of
security personnel and facilities and some do not have plans to
deal with such emergencies.
A growing number of Chinese have taken aim at the public health
sector in recent years as they were upset about soaring costs,
medical errors, and declining professional ethic. Last December,
doctors and nurses in a south China hospital were reported to have
worn helmets to shield themselves from attacks by a group of people
engaged in a violent medical dispute.
The conflict began when a patient who was checking out of the
hospital after 17 days of treatment suddenly stopped breathing and
died. Doctors said a group of people came to the hospital each day,
put up offensive signs, abused, and even fought with them.
The vice minister said a "peaceful hospital" campaign is
currently being carried out nationwide, aimed at solving such
"prominent" security problems by raising the medical staff's
professional ethic, banning bribes and other malpractice, and
increasing the hospitals' security personnel.
He also ordered hospitals to map out emergency plans.
(Xinhua News Agency April 18, 2007)