One of the Chinese characteristics is the belief that when anything goes
wrong, it can go wrong in ways more complicated than what can be imagined by
common sense.
Such is the case with the medical system's metamorphosis amid the
market-oriented reform. It should be pointed out that, as it is being complained
that health care is no longer affordable by common people, the medical
professionals may not be on the receiving end of the increasing amount of money
the system is devouring on a daily basis.
The failure is not just one-sided, in that decent medical services are
getting more distant, rather than closer, from the low-income people and the
vast masses in rural China. In the meantime, it also hurts the medical staff in
their reward and their morale, and eventually will hurt the sense of honour of
this profession.
I just happened to witness two medical emergency incidents recently and have
learned from them a lesson which I doubt I could have gained from the published
sources so far.
Both incidents took place in Beijing, where people are supposedly covered by
the best medical system available in China. One involved a friend's son who was
stricken by pneumonia and was ordered to stay in a municipal-level paediatric
hospital.
But the child was lucky that no major operation was required on him, and he
was discharged after a week although for that week, the family had to spend
one-third of its monthly income on the medical and in-patient care bills.
That was more than 1,000 yuan (US$125), not including the diagnoses and
prescriptions the child had received from the neighbourhood healthcare centres.
Since the father was a self-employed driver, not on the payroll of any large
institution, he didn't have any insurance policy to claim a refund for the
expenditure.
Then during the just-passed May Day holiday, as another friend of mine was
knocked down by a sudden bout of high blood pressure and was rushed to the ER
department of a national level hospital, I made more disturbing observations.
Nearly 3,000 yuan (US$375) was charged for the ambulance and less than 12
hours of ER check-ups and care. Fortunately, the patient had a State-sector job
and was entitled to get most of his bills refunded. But it was the doctors'
condition that scared me not the way they worked, but the way they got their
reward.
I chatted with two doctors, one after another, while waiting outside the ER
department. Contrary to the overcrowded scene in most hospitals, this was one of
its divisions in one of Beijing's newly developed areas, and was not having many
visitors one rainy afternoon of a public holiday.
Like many Chinese do, we compared notes about work hours and pay, and other
things in Beijingers' daily lives.
The neurologist told me his monthly take-home income was "just about the
amount your friend would pay for today, and maybe even less," while he sometimes
had to work on a 48-hour basis because the facility was too new and didn't have
many patients.
The physician was apparently able to earn a little more, and brought home
4,000 yuan (US$494) in one or two months last year.
But these are not high incomes in Beijing. Receiving kickbacks for
prescribing expensive medicines is prohibited in national hospitals, it's
reported. But where has the money gone now that the patients are paying so much?
The neurologist pointed to the practically empty large medical facility:
"Never has a day passed without me noticing some new building or interior
decorating work going on. Not just in this division, the hospital is expanding
nationwide, making takeovers of local hospitals."
But why can the management be expanding and building fervently and ignoring
its employees' rights? The answer seems simple: It has got the money. It has no
respect for rules. And it has no one to police its behaviour.
Email: younuo@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 05/08/2006 page4)