The public health system in Beijing is still not good enough to
make a quick response in emergencies like the SARS outbreak, senior
officials said yesterday in the capital.
Vice Mayor Niu Youcheng told the Beijing Municipal Working
Conference on Health that the city has five serious defects in its
health system: inadequate investment, slow response to public
health crises, weak sanitary facilities, lack of supervision and a
lack of health facilities in rural areas.
Niu said the city's current health budget failed to satisfy demands
for disease prevention and basic health care.
"Beijing still lacks open and transparent monitoring networks and
information reporting systems to cope with emergency health
crises," Niu said.
Beijing reported more than 2,000 SARS patients and nearly 200
deaths during the SARS outbreak this spring.
Niu said health and medical sectors would shift their focus on
diseases prevention and control from medical treatment alone and
build a complete and sound emergency public health crisis response
mechanism in 2005.
At
the conference, the city government decided to introduce private
funding and foreign capital into its state-owned hospitals.
(Xinhua News Agency November 20, 2003)
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