Health minister outlines strategy for the future
14/10/2007 10:42
Shanghai Daily news
Major infectious diseases, major chronic diseases, maternal and child health,
mental health, environmental health and behavioral health are all focuses of the
Chinese Health/Well-being Strategy till 2020, the Chinese Health Minister Chen
Zhu told the fifth Sino-US Symposium on Medicine in the 21st Century.
The
symposium opened in the city yesterday and Minister Chen said that the success
of the strategy would be seen in life expectancy, infant mortality and maternal
mortality and the control of communicable diseases and chronic non-communicable
diseases.
Improved accessibility to health services and the development
of the bio-medicine industry were also key factors.
Plans are already in
place to adopt the strategy. Other keys to improving China's health include the
prevention and control of liver diseases, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and
schistosomiasis (snail fever), metabolic syndrome and cancer.
The
strategy also highlights mental health with an accent on the young and the
elderly.
According to the China Psychology Association, 30 million
adolescents in China are suffering mental health problems. Among those with
mental disorders, up to 32 percent are students from middle school and primary
school, and up to 25.4 percent are college students.
Surveys in places
like Shanghai, Shandong and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region show sometimes
up to 30 percent of students have behavioral problems.
The plans goes on
to cover unhealthy life styles which affect more than 70 percent of the populace
in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou and aging - the number of people above 65 in
China will exceed 200 million in 2027.
Chen discussed China's
achievements in health care including its Internet reporting for communicable
diseases.
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