男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / View

Healthcare reform has macroeconomic implications

By PETER HILSENRATH (China Daily) Updated: 2015-05-19 11:33

The nation's healthcare sector has evolved erratically since 1949, when the People's Republic of China was founded.

Rural reform was an early priority and the first Five-Year Plan (1953-57) called for more hospital beds, doctors and antibiotics. It also recognized the necessity of a dual-track approach of Western medicine and traditional Chinese medicine.

Later, the use of "barefoot doctors" was cultivated, receiving widespread international recognition.

Late leader Deng Xiaoping's watershed shift toward markets had a profound effect on healthcare services. State support for hospitals, and healthcare more broadly, fell as China decentralized and turned to more organizational self-sufficiency.

Much of the Chinese population was left without adequate access to health services, especially in rural areas. Hospitals increasingly relied on sales of drugs, devices and high-technology services to augment their budgets. These problems were recognized and China subsequently sought to reengage the State in a strategy of improved public finance and provision of healthcare.

The severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak of 2003 also underscored the need to improve public health services. Increased spending including for health insurance has improved China's healthcare sector.

But problems remain, including in accounting, finance and management.

There are important macroeconomic dimensions to healthcare reform in China that should also be recognized. A general consensus prevails about China's shift from an export and investment orientation toward consumption and services. The role of health insurance is important to this transition.

Studies have shown that improved health insurance affects consumption as the need for precautionary savings falls. Increased spending on health insurance also improves the equity of resource allocation in China.

The relatively recent establishment of two urban and one rural insurance programs has been an important achievement. But while widespread, this insurance is shallow and Chinese consumers still save for a rainy day, particularly as healthcare costs rise.

The advantages of more reliance on health insurance for healthcare finance go further. Lower savings and higher consumption rates blunt the impact of slower growth on improving living standards.

And healthcare has been labor-intensive, offering the prospect of a wide range of good jobs for increasingly educated young Chinese. Yet there are risks to this scenario. Healthcare has historically suffered from low productivity gains. China will consign itself to lower growth rates in the long run unless it develops a different kind of health sector, one that relies more on technology than the prevailing hospital-centric and labor-intensive approaches.

The primary output should be health, not hospital use, physician visits or any other intermediate service. Opportunities exist to leapfrog more developed countries with new technology and organization. Use of electronic medical records, mobile communications and monitoring technology alongside computer-assisted diagnosis and treatment hold promise for improving efficiency in production.

Another even more important issue in the long run is efficiency in resource allocation. This involves identification of health services that are not worth paying for. No society can afford everything of benefit that technology can offer. Drawing the line about which services are covered by insurance and which are not is difficult.

Insurance beneficiaries will not be very constrained by the expense of others. Robust institutions are necessary to cope with such important decisions. China is better-placed to make these allocations than the United States, where great discomfort exists concerning public intervention in medical choice.

China's more coherent social fabric will help address these daunting challenges that are sure to come. Expect healthcare reform and its alignment to structural adjustment to feature in China's 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20).

The author is Joseph M. Long Chair of Healthcare Management and Professor of Economics, University of the Pacific, Stockton, California.

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 庆阳市| 资溪县| 德州市| 土默特右旗| 浑源县| 辽中县| 嵊泗县| 克什克腾旗| 南乐县| 连南| 舞钢市| 赤峰市| 庆阳市| 宣城市| 汾西县| 博白县| 福贡县| 东乡族自治县| 广德县| 德庆县| 宕昌县| 隆子县| 新和县| 思南县| 茂名市| 怀远县| 新巴尔虎右旗| 新乡市| 尼勒克县| 田阳县| 方正县| 宁明县| 大城县| 聊城市| 象州县| 新乡市| 大埔县| 三亚市| 马尔康县| 内丘县| 方山县| 沙湾县| 洛川县| 沿河| 盖州市| 麻阳| 舞钢市| 元谋县| 五大连池市| 怀远县| 宜川县| 诏安县| 天水市| 湖口县| 吴忠市| 长兴县| 和龙市| 平昌县| 林州市| 商南县| 贺州市| 怀化市| 湘阴县| 贺兰县| 湘阴县| 交口县| 成都市| 闸北区| 和硕县| 舟山市| 涡阳县| 本溪| 五原县| 民和| 文水县| 镇沅| 德清县| 双城市| 出国| 高州市| 增城市| 龙江县|