Please, no more rural healthcare propaganda!

China’s health service is in total disarray. Government officials freely admit it and Xinhua has carried numerous stories highlighting the problems of bribery, extortionate medical costs and fake medicines. The latest post on Time’s China Blog has a few stats. But just recently there has been a drive by propaganda chiefs to extol the virtues of the new rural co-operative health system.

Under the scheme, each person pays a mere ten yuan a year, while the state supplies another 40 yuan for each participant to the cooperative fund. Members of the scheme are then entitled to discounts on their medical fees using the fund pool. The idea is a very good one. The difficulty of providing medical care to 1.3 billion people can not be underestimated and China is a developing country. So let’s be honest about it. Yes, the situation is better than it was five years ago but it is still virtually unworkable in practice. Report the problems the Chinese government faces and how it proposes to overcome them.

Last week, Xinhua released this feature with the headline “Chinese government under pressure to make rural healthcare system work”. Ok, it’s long and not sparkling journalism but worth a read I reckon. Some of the quotes are very telling:

 ”With an average reimbursement rate for hospital fees only standing at a meagre 27.5 percent, the current subsidies are still utterly inadequate in dealing with grave and terminal diseases,” said Wu Ming, professor with the Medical School of Peking University.

and:

Zhao Jiqing, director of the Public Health Bureau of Beipiao, believes that the funding is not enough.

    ”Without the consistent support from central government coffers, the new scheme can hardly sustain itself. It is imperative the government increases the fund pool to make hospital fees more affordable for farmers,” he said.

and:

According to Wu Ming, professor with the Medical School of Peking University, the problem of rural healthcare should not be underestimated.

    ”The fact that 900 million farmers have limited access to medical care is so grave that it could diminish the government’s efforts to close the yawning wealth gap by throwing disease-plagued farmers back into poverty,” he said.

Given these opinions, it was immensely frustrating that the story had to go through four revisions before all of them were included in the story. Of course, there is always going to be a problem if a story is written with the specific aim of “showing the world that China’s rural healthcare system is better than it was” as one editor put it. This led to a glowing appraisal of the whole scheme with the reality buried in the second half of the story. A polishing colleague saw this story before I got my grubby hands on it and became embroiled in arguments with the writer about how we should be reporting the whole picture. The writer believed that the co-op scheme deserved high praise. But gradually she managed to pull out more information to the contrary.

She even managed to change one farmer’s quote which finished up looking like this:

Farmer Ma Yongshan, in Beipiao County of northeast China’s Liaoning Province, was stricken by colon cancer and a brain infarction. He received a reimbursement of 6,590 yuan for his hospital fees after joining the scheme.

But he still has 10,000 yuan left to pay by himself, which is not easy for a farmer whose annual disposable income is around 3,000 yuan.

“The program eased my burden - at least I could pay the bill on my own without borrowing. But if 60 percent of the expenses could have been refunded, that would have been a great blessing,” Ma said.

The first version of the story had no acknowledgement of the difficulty Ma faced in forking out 10,000 yuan. The original quote went something along the lines of “The program is fantastic”. Who knows if Ma exists, who knows what he really said, but the writer was willing to change his quote into something more believable.

It is not the first time, a story on rural healthcare in China has had to be turned on its head and it won’t be the last. But there are now three features on the Xinhua database and, more importantly on the Internet, depicting something approaching the reality. (The third is here). So surely, there can’t be many more occasions when a piece of blinkered rural healthcare propaganda lands on the polishing desk …