三级aa视频在线观看-三级国产-三级国产精品一区二区-三级国产三级在线-三级国产在线

USEUROPEAFRICAASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
China
Home / China / China

Cost of medicine falls as health reform starts

By Shan Juan and Wang Qingyun | China Daily | Updated: 2012-07-03 07:57

Cost of medicine falls as health reform starts

A woman takes away her medicines after paying for them at Beijing Friendship Hospital on Monday. Li Wen / Xinhua

Goal for pilot project is weaning hospitals off excessive prescriptions

All public hospitals in the southern boomtown of Shenzhen and one in Beijing have begun scrapping their drug markups, leading the way in a comprehensive public hospital reform aimed at improving the quality of medical services and lower drug costs.

On Sunday, the hospitals in both cities undertook what is deemed the boldest and hardest part of the medical reforms as a trial of the policy intended to take effect across the Chinese mainland, said Ma Xiaowei, vice-minister of health, while inspecting Beijing Friendship Hospital, which was selected for the trial.

Public hospitals on the mainland began in early 1980s to make money selling medicine to support their daily operations after government funding cutbacks.

As a result, doctors have tended to prescribe excessive or unnecessary medicines, driving up medical costs and straining doctor-patient relationships, according to Ma.

Under the new initiative, the markup is removed and the economic losses incurred will be covered by increasing medical consultation and service fees.

For a long time, doctors' consultation fees at Beijing's public hospitals cost at most 14 yuan ($2). In the trial at Beijing Friendship Hospital, consultations cost 42 to 100 yuan. Patients covered by the capital's public healthcare insurance will be reimbursed 40 yuan for each medical consultation, so the out-of-pocket cost of seeing a top specialist is 20 to 60 yuan. "As we have expected, the number of patients going to the ordinary outpatient sector increased after the trial began," Liu Jian, president of the hospital, said at a news conference on Monday.

The hospital saw 1,849 outpatients by 4 pm on Sunday. Compared with previous Sundays, the workload this Sunday almost doubled, and the increase mainly took place in the ordinary outpatient sector, Liu said, indicating more people chose to see an ordinary doctor instead of a veteran specialist.

Han Xiaofang, head of the capital's medical reform office, said medicine sales generate costs instead of gaining profits for the hospital.

"Doctors will prescribe medicines more rationally than before," she said. "That will help optimize the use of the healthcare insurance fund, and ease the heavy workload at large public hospitals and on their experts by raising the consultation fee."

Previously, 50 to 60 percent of the hospital's revenue came from selling medicines, Liu Jian said. The markup in medicines prices brought 110 million yuan to the hospital in 2010 and 126 million yuan in 2011.

"It is estimated the higher consultation fee will make up for most of the loss, though the hospital's revenue will decrease slightly, by 2.2 million yuan after the reform," Liu said.

Patients have mixed thoughts about the initiative.

A patient coming from Shandong province to the hospital to treat a blood disease said he didn't see his medical cost change much.

"I used to pay about 700 yuan for the consultation and medicines. Now the same medicines cost 80 yuan less, but consulting the veteran specialist I used to see cost 100 yuan, which is about 80 yuan more than before," he said.

A patient surnamed Hou said she had a stroke and chose to see an ordinary doctor because the consultation fee for a specialist was too expensive for her, and she would get no health insurance reimbursement because she was not a Beijing resident.

Many patients said they would not consider consulting a top specialist because they would have to pay at least 20 yuan out of pocket.

Another patient in the hospital showed two of his receipts and said his hepatitis prescriptions dropped from 322 to 280 yuan.

The medicine costs for Shenzhen public hospital patients also dropped, the city's commission of health, population and family planning said.

Inpatients would save about 7 yuan and outpatients 235 yuan, it said.

The commission estimated removing the markup would cost local public hospitals 10 million yuan, which would be covered by the higher consultation and service fees and subsidies from the city and provincial governments.

Contact the writers at [email protected] and [email protected]

Editor's picks
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产片a | 国内精品视频成人一区二区 | 日韩 国产 欧美 精品 在线 | 欧美特黄录像播放 | 国产精品伦理一二三区伦理 | 国产叼嘿久久精品久久 | 一区二区三区久久精品 | 达达兔午夜起神影院在线观看麻烦 | 小优视频高清视频在线看 | 国内精品自在自线视频香蕉 | 欧美日本综合 | 日韩视频一区二区三区 | 亚洲一二三区久久五月天婷婷 | 成年女人天堂香蕉网视频 | 国产不卡一区二区视频免费 | 免费尤物视频 | 强开小嫩苞一区二区三区l 婷婷丁香色综合狠狠色 | 国产成人吃奶一区 | 亚洲专区区免费 | 久久se精品一区二区国产 | 7m凹凸国产刺激在线视频 | 久久久久女人精品毛片 | 黄色一级视频片 | 就要干就要操 | 视频一区二区在线观看 | 女人牲交一级毛片 | 亚洲一区欧美日韩 | 二区视频在线 | 四虎91| 日韩a一级欧美一级在线播放 | 国产高清视频网站 | 国产在线精品视频 | 99精品亚洲 | 中文字幕第13亚洲另类 | 免费特黄一级欧美大片 | 色性综合 | 激情毛片视频在线播放 | 特色一级片 | 欧美日韩国产在线观看一区二区三区 | 久久中文字幕综合不卡一二区 | 国内成人精品视频 |