Govt continues its well-being initiative
After prolonging people's lives, and slashing infant and maternal mortality rates, China is poised to become healthier as it builds a moderately prosperous society across the board.
The goal was crystallized as the Healthy China strategy in the 13th Five-Year
Plan (2016-20). Enlisting the backing of the central leadership, the goal of
Healthy China looks achievable.
Nothing is more telling of the country's progress in the health sector than
the improvement in three main public health indicators.
Average life expectancy in China surged from 35 during the early years of the
People's Republic of China, founded in 1949, to over 76 in 2015.
The infant mortality rate dropped from 20 percent immediately after the PRC
was founded to 0.81 percent last year, while the maternal mortality rate dropped
from 1,500 of every 100,000 in 1949 to about 20 of every 100,000 in 2015,
according to statistics released by the National Health and Family Planning
Commission.
Li Bin, head of the commission, attributed the success to government
commitment and leadership in protecting and promoting the health of the general
public.
President Xi Jinping under-scored the significance of Healthy China on
different occasions in recent years, from saying that there would be no
all-around well-being without health for all the people, and urging
food-producing enterprises to produce high quality products to ensure safety.
While meeting the World Health Organization director-general Margaret Chan in
July, Xi said enabling all Chinese people to access quality healthcare services
is a significant part of China's Two Centennial Goals - to build an all-around
moderately prosperous society by 2020 and to build a modern socialist country by
the middle of the 21st century.
The country continues to be held back by structural problems in its medical
system, such as lack of affordability and other issues that put stress on its
public hospitals. It launched a new round of medical reforms in 2009.
In April 2015, the 11th meeting of the Central Leading Group for Deepening
Overall Reform endorsed new guidelines on public hospital reform.
In December 2015, the 19th meeting of the Central Leading Group for Deepening
Overall Reform adopted a document to merge China's two medical insurance schemes
for urban and rural residents in a bid to guarantee equal access to basic
healthcare.
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