China's Vice Premier Wu Yi apologized to lawmakers on Wednesday for
failing to check soaring medical expenses.
"People are dissatisfied, and I feel guilty for that. I should
apologize to you," Wu said at a panel discussion with lawmakers on
the sidelines of the Fifth Session of the 10th National People's
Congress (NPC).
Wu, who had successfully steered China's negotiations into the
World Trade Organization, is the only female vice premier in
China's cabinet. Her jurisdiction includes health and medical
services.
Rising medical expenditure has become one of Chinese people's
major concerns. And frequent accidents caused by substandard food
and medicine added to people's misery.
"Food and drug safety concerns people's health and life safety,"
Wu said, pledging to the lawmakers that the government will make
utmost efforts to tackle existing problems.
Statistics showed that nearly 70 percent of China's food
producers are small factories or workshops. More than 85 percent of
China's drug manufacturers are small-sized companies with annual
sales revenue less than 100 million yuan (about US$12.9
million).
She promised that the government will, in this year, tighten the
supervision over small workshops, food stores, stalls and eateries,
where food poisoning accidents are most likely to happen.
The government will also tighten the monitoring of the food and
drug businesses in the production and distribution fields, Wu
said.
She also promised more efforts to address the problems in the
medicine market and said that the country's drug watchdog will
improve administration on drug research and production.
(Xinhua News Agency March 8, 2007)
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