Parents crowd the front counter at the Foshan Maternity and Infant
Hospital in Guangdong Province trying to register their children to
see a doctor. — CFP
WITH a potential baby boom looming after China scrapped its
one-child policy, glaring gaps in pediatric care are becoming more
acute.
The problem: too many patients and too few qualified doctors.
To address the crisis, eight medical universities in China are
restoring undergraduate majors in pediatric care, which had been
suspended for 17 years.
In Shanghai, it’s common to see long waiting lines in the
pediatric departments of hospitals on ordinary days. During seasons
rife with infections, the waiting rooms become overrun with sick
children and their patients.
When variants of the bird flu virus hit Shanghai this winter,
four local pediatric hospitals reported handling a combined 47,000
patients during three days of the Spring Festival holiday. Average
waiting time was up to six hours.
For parents like Diana Zhang, a 32-year-old mother of a
four-year-old boy, sitting in a waiting room for hours with a sick
child is intolerable. She had to endure the misery of it at Xinhua
Hospital recently.
“It was torture to sit there, waiting for the doctor, with my
coughing son in my arms and a crowd of children around me crying
and rasping,” said Zhang.
Prefer to give a miss
Last year, the number of pediatricians in China dropped to
100,000 from 105,000 five years ago, according to China Health
Statistics. That meant an average 0.43 pediatrician for every 1,000
children, far below the World Health Organization standard of 1.5
pediatricians per 1,000 children.
Many medical students prefer to give pediatrics a miss. They see
it as a career of demanding work, low wages, high stress and
limited promotion opportunities.
“Though many Chinese people think of pediatrics as an easy
medical field, that’s hardly the case,” said Dr I-ChunHu, vice
chancellor of Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine.
In fact, child health care can be very difficult because babies
and toddlers can’t describe their symptoms, and parents who bring
them for treatment often get hysterical with concern.
It is also true that the revenue of pediatric clinics is usually
much less than that of other departments in the hospital system
because fewer drugs are dispensed, and the sale of preions forms a
large chunk of income.
The current crunch in pediatric care means that many doctors in
the field have to work long hours, especially during infectious
seasons. That crimps their time for research, which is considered
key element to promotion in hospitals.
The National Health and Family Planning Committee in late
February announced the restoration of undergraduate majors in
pediatrics at eight universities, including China Medical
University, Chongqing Medical University and Harbin Medical
University.
Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine was ahead of the
pack, reinstating that major four years ago.
Hu at Jiao Tong said canceling the degree nationwide in 1999 was
merely an attempt to bring China’s medical education system in line
with international practices. It was never a major reason for the
declining number of pediatricians in China, he said, noting that
medical students have always been free to choose pediatrics in
graduate studies.
Medical professionals say they hope restoring the undergraduate
major will encourage more students to stay in that specialty.
Jiao Tong had hoped to recruit a maximum 40 pediatric-oriented
students a year to the new major after it was restored in 2012, but
the school has managed only a combined 135 students so far. Despite
that, the university plans to try to expand enrollment of students
to 60 this year.
It is resting its hopes on young people like Zhao Zhicong, 22,
who was enrolled in the pediatric program in 2012. Zhao, now a
senior, said he has always been interested in pediatrics but still
harbors some doubts about it as a lifelong career.
“As a child with poor health, I was a frequent visitor to
hospitals,” he said. “I always regarded pediatricians as the most
respected people in the world. But that doesn’t mean they are
widely respected by the public at large. It’s frustrating to hear
in the media about how pediatricians don’t have particularly good
career prospects. Let’s hope it’s a sign of better times ahead.”
Zhao said it would probably take him another 10 years to complete
master’s and doctorate degrees, and then do his internship before
becoming a fully qualified pediatrician.
“I am betting that things will improve in 10 years,” he said.
Guo Chong, 26, is following in her mother’s footsteps. The
daughter of a pediatrician said she was aware of the demanding work
of that vocation, but decided to make it her major in graduate
study three years ago.
“I did question my choice when I saw some of my high-school
classmates earning big salaries in the finance industry,” Guo said.
“I talked it over with my mother, and she helped me realize that a
sense of accomplishment can’t always be measured in terms of
income.”
Guo said she was deeply impressed by the number of patients who
would arrive early at the hospital so they could get appointments
to see her mother in particular.
“It shows that parents have great trust in her skills, and it’s
hard to put a value on that,” said Guo.
Leave an open door
In addition to training more pediatricians, the health system
needs to stanch the outflow of children’s doctors, according to
Ding Jie, vice president of Peking University No. 1 Hospital. Too
many of them are leaving the field to make more money elsewhere.
Indeed, the profile of pediatric medicine needs to be raised to
the prominence it deserves, according to Cai Wei, president of
Shanghai Institute of Pediatrics.
“Without reform in the current system, students who choose
pediatrics as a major may leave the specialty later,” he said.
Pediatric students at Jiao Tong have the freedom to shift to
other majors at any time during their studies.
“We want to leave that door open so that they aren’t afraid of
being trapped if they enter that room,” said the university’s Vice
Chancellor Hu. “What we need are only pediatricians who are
interested in this career.”
原文链接:http://www.shanghaidaily.com/feature/Is-there-a-doctor-in-the-house-Too-few/shdaily.shtml