Equity in Health and Health Car

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							Equity in Health and Health Care:
The Case of China
    Gail Henderson, PhD
       China the “Sick Man of Asia”

―An eminent Chinese official stated that in Shensi
province at the beginning of 1931, three million
persons had died of hunger in the last few years,
and the misery had been such that 400,000
women and children had changed hands by sale…
There are districts in which the position of the rural
population is that of a man standing permanently
up to the neck in water, so that even a ripple is
sufficient to drown him.‖
    -- RH Tawney, 1932 survey
        China the “Sick Man of Asia”
• Life expectancy 35
• 9 of 10 leading causes of death were acute,
  infectious diseases
   – Dysentery, typhoid, cholera, schistosomiasis
   – TB accounted for 10-15% of all deaths
   – STDs 4th most common admitting diagnosis in urban
     hospitals
• As many as 1/4 of children died before age one
   – Infant mortality rate (IMR) 200-250/1000 live births in
     first year
   – 80% of these deaths were from tetanus
• Health care facilities limited to urban areas
Mao’s “Long March” to 1949 Liberation
         Mao’s Revolution 1949-1976
• Communist Party controls government and
  economy at every level
• Transformation to socialist economy
  –   focus on heavy industry
  –   wage control, job assignments by the state
  –   collectivized agriculture and urban workplaces
  –   ban private economic activity
  –   limit consumer goods and foreign imports
• Household registration severely limits migration
• Focus on community services, large standing
  army that can be mobilized for public works
   Health Care is Declared a Right:
First National Health Conference 1950

• Health care must be directed at the masses of
  laboring people
• Unify traditional and western medicine
• Emphasize prevention of disease
• Utilize military-style mass campaigns to
  achieve these health care goals
George Hatem
“The People’s Doctor”
with Mao Zedong
       George Hatem, MD, 1910-1988

• Born in Lebanon, 1932 UNC graduate
• MD in Geneva, China for tropical medicine
• Worked at Shanghai dermatology/ VD practice
  (100,000 prostitutes in 1930s/40s)
• Met Mao in 1936 on Long March, military
  physician until Liberation in 1949
• After Liberation, went to Beijing to work on STDs
  and leprosy – stayed 50 years
    Mass Campaign to Eradicate STDs
• Training of para-professionals and public health
  personnel
• Mass screening and treatment
   – syphilis, gonorrhea, nongonococcal urethritis
• Propaganda
   – mass media, mandatory education meetings,
     political messages in entertainment events
• Complete elimination of prostitution
   – in context of 1950 Marriage Law which gave
     women legal and property rights
Interview at UNC School of Medicine
      by Dr. James Bryan, 1978
     China’s Health Care System

―This system is characterized by widely
distributed, relatively inexpensive,
technologically simple health services and by
a lack of orientation toward hospital care and
more sophisticated alternatives for those who
can or may be willing to pay for medical
care.‖

   -- Robert Blendon, NEJM 1979
Created 55,000 Commune Hospitals, >2000 County Hospitals
“The Barefoot Doctors of China”
 Filmed in 1975
 Health Achievements of the Maoist Era

• Doubled life expectancy to ~ 65 years in 1975
• Reduced IMR to ~ 50
• Public health infrastructure
  – improved prenatal care, lowered birth rate
  – reduced childhood infectious diseases
• 85%+ had some form of medical insurance
• Epidemiologic transition
  – leading causes of death shifted to non-communicable
    disease in all areas
 Urban-Rural Differentials Not Eliminated
Recurrent Health Expenditures
                                Life Expectancy in 1975:
                                Guizhou 59, Shanghai 72

                                Rural public health
                                programs varied in
                                resources and coverage

                                Continuing problems with
                                infectious and parasitic
                                diseases, malnutrition
         Post-Mao Era, 1979-present

• ―Open door‖ policy
• De-collectivization and decentralization
  undermined collective welfare system
• Party control maintained
• Remarkably rapid but uneven economic growth
  – 9% growth per year
  – Increase in income inequality (Gini coefficient)
• Enormous social change
          Health in the Post-Mao Era
• Underlying population growth dynamics
  – Declining birth and death rates
  – Changing age structure
  – Internal migration (120 million ‗floating‘)
• Changes in diet, tobacco use
• Modernization & privatization of health care
  – Investment in urban, high tech medicine
  – Profits driving medicine and public health
     • 1980-90, government funding to public health declined from
       100% to 30-50%
• Changes in burden of disease
  – Continuing rise in non-communicable diseases (cancer,
    stroke, cardiovascular disease)
  – Re-emergence of STDs and other infectious diseases
          Population Growth

When the People‘s Republic of China was
founded in 1949, it had a population of 540
million. Only three decades later its population
was more than 800 million. This unprecedented
population increase has created a strong
population momentum that is now driving
China‘s population growth despite already low
levels of fertility. Within the next three decades,
China's population will increase by another 260
million (to 1,560,000,000)
Population Growth, Crude Birth and
     Death Rates, 1949 - 1996




      GLF: 24 million excess deaths
           Aging Population

• http://www.iiasa.ac.at/Research/LUC/Chin
  aFood/data/anim/pop_ani.htm
Migration Between Provinces, 1985-1990




 Dark green provinces have gained; dark brown provinces have lost.
Food Calories Available for Human Consumption
in China by Commodity, 1961-1996 (kcal/person/day)
   Overweight Prevalence Among Adults 20-59y
Participating in the 1991, 1993 & 1997 CHNS surveys
                        25%                     24%


                                                                                                               21%

                        20%
                                                                  1991       1993     1997
                                            17%                                                    17%
                                                                                                           16%
                                          15%
         % Overweight




                        15%                                                                  14%
                                    14%                                                                  14%
                                                                                       13%     13%


                                                            11%            11%

                        10%        9%
                                                                   9% 9%
                              8%                                                 8% 8%
                                                      8%
                                                           7%


                        5%




                        0%
                              Rural        Urban       <40         40-49            50-59    60-69         70+


             Among non-overweight adults aged 20-59 in 1991.                         Source: Popkin
             Women pregnant or lactating were excluded.



 AND increase in stunting in some rural areas, 1987-- 1992
300m Chinese Have No Access to Safe Water
           China Daily, March 23, 2005


                      The country is ready to launch a
                      long-term project to deal with
                      the lack of clean water, a
                      headache threatening the health
                      of some 360 million rural
                      people, or about one third of the
                      whole rural population.
                        "By the end of 2020, we are
                      going to reach the goal of
                      basically providing safe drinking
                      water for all rural people," Zhai
                      said.
                                 Tobacco

 • World‘s largest smoking population
      – 320 million, ¼ smokers in the world
      – 60% of men and 4% of women smoke
      – 40-50% of male physicians smoke
 • World‘s largest passive smoking population
      – 460 million (55% are non-smoking women)
 • 1 million premature deaths in 2000
      – expect over 2 million per year by 2025
 • 3% of health care budget

Source: Hu Tehwei, UC Berkeley, 2005
Re-emergence of STDs and Illegal Drug Use


        In 1979 China
                         The economic and cultural
      opened its door
                           environment changed
          to the West
                         Sexuality and the behavior of
                           young individuals changed
    Economic reforms     Prostitution re-emerged
    were introduced in   Drug traffic from SE Asia
       the early 1980s


                                  STDs/HIV
                  Annual Reported STDs in China
                           1985-2000
        1000000

         900000                                                                859040
Cases




                                                                    836655
         800000

         700000
                                                                          632307
         600000

         500000
                                                                     432626
         400000                                    362654
                                                                 398512
         300000
                                   175528240848             300466
         200000           139724
                  49234                           199733
         100000
                               85977 157108
                           23534
              0
                                                                                   Year
Greater Freedom, Mobility and Inequalities
      Produce Three HIV Epidemics

1. IV drug users (IDUs) in border provinces and
  southern China: Drug traffic from the ‗golden
  triangle‘ of SE Asia flourished in 1980s & 90s

2. Blood donors in 7 central provinces: Farmers
  with few resources sold blood, government failed
  to close down worst offenders and covered it up

3. Commercial sex workers and the influence of
  other STDS—both had been completely
  controlled under communist system, now
  fostering HIV epidemic
              “Voices of HIV”
             Documentary, 2005




World AIDS Day 2004: President Hu Jintao shakes hand
    with AIDS patient in You’an Hospital in Beijing
         Assessing Health Disparities
• What is the question?
  –   Comparing populations (urban-rural, gender?)
  –   Comparing health status (what diseases?)
  –   Comparing access to health care (what kind?)
  –   Comparing provision of public health services?
  –   Over time?
• What kinds of data?
  – Individual, household, community level?
• Quality of the data—measurement issues
  – Self-reports on morbidity vs. mortality data
  – What is omitted?
    Measuring Health Care Equity:
Answer depends on the measure selected
 • Access to Treatment
    – Geographic proximity
    – Cost as a barrier to care/ insurance
    – Services relevant to particular group (MCH)
 • Quality of Care
    – Health care providers
    – Technology, drugs, and services
 • Public Health Services
    – Financing issues
    – Surveillance and immunization
       For Example, Cost of Care
• Medical costs up substantially since the reforms,
  but medical prices are lower in poorer rural
  areas than in wealthy rural or urban areas.
• Despite this, a much higher non-use rate of
  medical care is reported in poor rural areas, and
  outpatient utilization in poor rural areas is more
  sensitive to income change than in non-poor
  areas. Why?
  – Affordability depends on price and income, and
    income growth has been much slower in rural areas.
  – Lack of insurance is related to lower use of care
Insurance Coverage in Urban and
     Rural Areas, 1993-2003

             Urban   Rural
  1993       73%     16%
  1998       56%     13%
  2003       55%     21%
  2003: SARS Focused Attention on China’s
        “Failing Health Care System”

• The old rural cooperative
  health system gone…new one
  is under-funded. Only ~ 20%
  of farmers have medical
  insurance

• YET, the medical and public
  health infrastructure (along
  with the army!) was mobilized
  to combat and defeat this
  threat to public health
   “China: Increasing Health Gaps in a
    Transitional Economy” Liu et al.
• Does economic reform and growth improve
  health status for all?
  – Yes, in most cases
• Have economic reforms lead to greater gender
  inequality in health?
  – Yes in IMR, less than expected female advantage in
    life expectancy (plus increased urban-rural gender
    differences)
• Have economic reforms lead to greater inter-
  regional inequality in health?
  – Yes, clear socioeconomic gradient in life expectancy
    (64.5 vs. 74.5 years) [but in 1975, it was 59 vs. 72]

						
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