Cracking down on misleading advertisements and
companies that provide unsafe beauty treatments will be the
priorities of a new campaign to be launched by the Ministry of
Health in a bid to regulate the healthcare market.
Advertisements for medical products can sometimes be
misleading, exaggerating the function or effects a certain product
might have. In the worst cases, the use of some products can cause
illness or even death.
Earlier this year, a new regulation on advertisements
for medical services was implemented, which aimed to stop companies
from exaggerating the effects of treatments by banning the use of
any disease names.
Under the regulation, an advert can reveal no more
than the name of the medical institution, its address and phone
number, specialty and qualifications, type of ownership, number of
beds and opening hours.
In addition to the ban on false advertising, the
ministry said it will focus on the safety of blood donors and
crackdown on unlicensed medical services during this year's
campaign.
It vowed to close down illegal blood-collection
centers and bring to justice those involved in the illegal
practice.
The public was alarmed by a report earlier this year
that in some rural areas of south China's Guangdong Province, merchants were collecting
blood from the poor and selling it to underground
networks.
In Jieyang, a rural town in Guangdong, some victims
were forced to sell their blood more than a dozen times in a month,
earning their agents more than 10,000 yuan (US$1,300) a month, an
investigative report by the China Central Television network (CCTV)
said.
At a recent high-level conference on the reinforcement
of economic order, Vice Premier Wu Yi said the nation must not relent in its
efforts to crack down on unauthorized medical practices and the
blood trade.
According to Ma Xiaowei, vice minister of health,
China has been running a campaign since April 2005 to promote blood
safety and crack down on illegal medical practices and significant
progress has been made.
More than 174,000 unregistered medical professionals
have been punished and 2,485 medical agencies, which violated the
rules have had their licenses eliminated, Ma said.
However, Vice Minister Chen Xiaohong warned that a
number of problems persist, including a lack of attention on the
part of local governments and a lack of supervision by relevant
authorities.
In Beijing, 40 percent of the 116 medical institutions
surveyed by a task force were found to be operating
illegally.
(China Daily April 28,
2007)
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