Low-income pregnant women in
Shenzhen are receiving cheap yet quality healthcare services thanks
to a wide ranging, government subsidized project.
Since November last year about 60
hospitals in six districts of Shenzhen have set aside a number of
beds specifically for pregnant women in the low income bracket,
whether they have residency in the city or not.
The hospitals charge 1,200 yuan
(US$148) for natural delivery, which includes a two-day hospital
stay, the necessary medicines and physical checks, the director of
the Department of Maternity and Children Healthcare of the Shenzhen
Health Bureau, who is surnamed Lin, said.
"The hospitals lose money," he said.
Normally, a natural delivery costs between 2,000 and 2,600 yuan
(US$247-321).
To further aid the low-income group
and help the hospitals maintain normal operations, the district
governments give a subsidy of up to 400 yuan (US$49) for each
natural delivery.
This means that at some hospitals,
beneficiaries of the scheme pay as little as 800 yuan
(US$99).
For women who need a Caesarean
section, and those who suffer serious illness or difficulty during
pregnancy, the district governments sometimes pay a large
proportion of the medical costs.
According to the Shenzhen health
authority, the municipal and district governments have allocated
about 11 million yuan (US$1.36 million) for the project, which was
first launched in 2000 in the Baoan District on a trial basis,
where many migrant workers live.
So far, more than 7,000 women have
benefited from the project, with more than 90 percent of the
beneficiaries being migrant laborers, said Lin.
Ma Feng, an ethnic Miao minority
woman from Southwest China's Guizhou Province, is one of those
beneficiaries.
Working in a local farm with her
husband and brothers, Ma earns 25 yuan (US$3.08) a day. Because of
their financial situation the family did not have the extra money
for her to have prenatal check-ups, thereby missing out on the
opportunity to detect any defects or illness in mother and
baby.
Fortunately, the Baoan Healthcare
Center for Maternity and Children came to the rescue. In accordance
with the scheme the hospital waived nearly two-thirds of her
medical costs.
"We should thank the doctors, the
hospital and the government's policies. Otherwise, poor families
like ours could not afford such high cost treatment," said
Ma.
The government aims to discourage
pregnant women from giving birth in sub-standard hospitals or
illegal private clinics, said Lin.
"The safety of both mother and child
cannot be guaranteed in unqualified or illegal clinics, but still
many people choose these hospitals because they can pay as little
as 150 yuan (US$18) for a delivery," Lin said.
(China Daily August 4,
2005)
|