China deepens medical reform through ‘health-first strategy’

BEIJING: With over 20 percent of its population aged over 60 and a growing public focus on health, China has committed to a “health-first strategy” that highlights disease prevention and health management.
This strategy was outlined in a key reform resolution recently adopted at the third plenary session of the 20th Communist Party of China Central Committee.
With solid progress in healthcare, the country is transitioning from primarily treating diseases to maintaining overall health.
“This transition is a common feature of medical reform and upgrades in many countries,” said Gordon G. Liu, dean of the Institute for Global Health and Development at Peking University.
He noted that in an aging society, the demands for medical services are increasingly steered toward high-quality health management, chronic disease management and long-term care.
Liu said that the medical services for health management still have room for improvement in China. To ensure the overall health of its massive population, the country needs to boost “capacities for disease monitoring and early warning, risk assessment, epidemiological investigation, testing and inspection, emergency response and medical treatment,” according to the resolution.
In recent years, the government and medical institutions have made significant progress in these areas, particularly in combating chronic diseases and forestalling epidemics.
Action plans have been issued to prevent and control four major chronic diseases that account for over 80 percent of the country’s deaths. These plans propose measures such as increasing early awareness among diabetes patients to prevent disease progression, and enhancing the screening capacity for chronic respiratory diseases.
China has been offering early screening services for many prevalent cancers, covering most of the top 10 types of cancer. Nearly 200 million women have benefited from screenings for cervical and breast cancer.
Regarding epidemics, China has established a direct reporting system covering around 84,000 medical institutions. –The Daily Mail-CGTN news exchange item