19 May 2009

The Collapse of Chinese Rural Healthcare

I remember reading about the "Barefoot Doctors", paramedics sent out by Mao Zedong to address the lack of healthcare in the the rural regions, and now, with the Chinese Communist Party's aggressive focus on economic development in urban areas, their rural healthcare system has been systematically dismantled:
Tan Zhengrui serves some 700 people in China’s rural Miyun county, making doctor’s rounds on his motorcycle with a stethoscope, thermometer and blood-pressure gauge -- the sum total of his medical equipment.

Just 80 kilometers (50 miles) from central Beijing, Tan’s clinic in Peng He Yan village consists of a bed, a bench and a couple of desks. He doesn’t even have a scale to weigh patients.
The focus of the article is on the worries that if Swine Flu "goes viral"* in the rural areas, there will be nothing to arrest its spread.

Note that Tan Zhengrui, who started his career as one of Mao's "Barefoot Doctors," is due to retire, and there is no replacement in sight, and he suggests a return to the old ways, "We need a policy like Mao’s, to order people out to the countryside."

Certainly, requiring a year of internship in the rural areas as a part of a doctor's education would not be a bad thing.

*Sorry for the pun.
OK, I'm not really sorry for the pun, I'm an invertebrate punster, so slug me.
Not sorry for that one either.

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