Beijing municipal government issued a document last week saying
that a move will be accelerated to turn B and C-level hospitals
into community health centers by 2008.
Costly medical bills and crowded hospitals have been a headache
bothering many patients for years. To solve this problem, the State
Council called for the development of a community health service in
urban areas early this year. This provides citizens with easy
access to medical service and reduce the cost for visiting doctors
by a large margin.
Government preference towards big state-owned hospitals in terms
of medical resources in the past years has resulted in a lack of
basic healthcare service at the grass-roots level. The
psychological impact on patients is that they prefer big hospitals
to small community clinics whatever their health complaint.
Efforts by the Beijing municipal government will try to change
this situation by putting both human resources and funds into the
development of community clinics. Basic medical functions, such as
nursing care, will be taken care of by community clinics. Big
hospitals will focus on complicated operations and serious
diseases.
To cut down medical bills for patients, the revenue and
expenditure for community clinics will be managed in a separate
manner. They are required to turn their income to the financial
coffer of the government, which will pay salaries of medical
workers in the clinics.
If this mechanism can be successfully applied, the community
clinics will not have to depend on selling of drugs for their
revenues and thus the prices of drugs will be able to be
lowered.
To further guarantee reasonable prices of medicines, the
government will collectively purchase drugs for these clinics.
Therefore they will not have any connection with pharmacies or drug
producers and thus doctors will have no way to get kickbacks from
drug salespeople.
If the move could be successfully materialized, the medical
bills for patients in Beijing will be reduced by 432 million yuan
(US$54 million) a year, according to health authorities.
However rosy the picture is, realization of such a goal requires
even more efforts in pushing the plan into practice. A lack of
planning will ruin the entire strategy.
Without effective supervision, the extra income from drugs for
the various B and C-level hospitals will flow into the pockets of
corrupt people. There is also another possibility that this income
will find way to the coffer of district-level health bureaus or the
municipal health bureau.
A process is needed for patients to build confidence in
community clinics. A channel is also needed for community clinics
to refer patients whom they cannot treat to big hospitals.
(China Daily August 14, 2006)