Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Health_in_China> ?p ?o }
- Health_in_China abstract "Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has been practiced for years, and served as the basis for health care in China for much of its history. Western-inspired evidence-based medicine made its way to China beginning in the 19th Century. When the Communist Party took over in 1949, health care was nationalized, a national \"patriotic health campaign\" attempted to address basic health and hygiene education, and basic primary care was dispatched to rural areas through barefoot doctors and other state-sponsored programs. Urban health care was also streamlined. However, beginning with economic reforms in 1978, health standards in China began to diverge significantly between urban and rural areas, and also between coastal and interior provinces. Much of the health sector became privatized. As state-owned enterprises shut down and the vast majority of urban residents were no longer employed by the state, they also lost much of the social security and health benefits. As a result, the majority of urban residents paid almost all health costs out-of-pocket beginning in the 1990s, and most rural residents simply could not afford to pay for health care in urban hospitalities.Since 2006, China has been undertaking the most significant health care reforms since the Mao era. The government launched the New Rural Co-operative Medical Care System (NRCMCS) in 2005 in an overhaul of the healthcare system, particularly intended to make it more affordable for the rural poor. Under the NRCMCS, some 800 million rural residents gained basic, tiered medical coverage, with the central and provincial governments covering between 30-80% of regular medical expenses. Availability of medical insurance has increased in urban areas as well. By 2011 more than 95% of the total population of China had basic health insurance, though out-of-pocket costs and the quality of care varied significantly. The health infrastructure in Beijing, Shanghai and other major cities were approaching developed-world standards, and are vastly superior compared to the rural interior. Since economic reform began, the country has also made significant improvements in decreasing infant mortality and increasing life expectancy (as of 2013, 74 for males and 77 for females). Beginning in the first decade of the 21st Century, China has also become a major market for health-related multinational companies. Companies such as AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, and Merck entered the Chinese market and have experienced explosive growth. China has also become a growing hub for health care research and development.".
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink www.chinamedicalboard.org.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink annurev.publhealth.25.101802.123116.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink 269.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink publichealth,09-13-04.pdf.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink 0806_china.aspx.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink www.chc.org.cn.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink c-3.htm.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink www.cpma.org.cn.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink www.moh.gov.cn.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink en.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink china.
- Health_in_China wikiPageExternalLink destinationChina.aspx.
- Health_in_China wikiPageID "407904".
- Health_in_China wikiPageLength "55018".
- Health_in_China wikiPageOutDegree "160".
- Health_in_China wikiPageRevisionID "690229828".
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Abortion.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Acupressure.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Acupuncture.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Anhui.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Appendicitis.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink AstraZeneca.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Avian_influenza.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Birth_control.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Brookings-Tsinghua_Center.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Bubonic_plague.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Business_cycle.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:Death_in_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:Health_in_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Child_mortality.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink China_Tobacco.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink China–Cornell–Oxford_Project.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_economic_reform.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_herbology.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Cholera.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Communist_Party_of_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Compost.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Constitution.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Cultural_Revolution.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Cupping_therapy.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Disease_surveillance.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Eli_Lilly_and_Company.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Emergency_service.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_health.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Evidence-based_medicine.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Five-year_plans_of_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Fly.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Food_and_Agriculture_Organization.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Food_safety.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Four_Pests_Campaign.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Gallstone.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Gao_Yaojie.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Gejiu.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink GlaxoSmithKline.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Great_Leap_Forward.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Group_A_streptococcal_infection.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Guangdong.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Guizhou.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink HIV.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink AIDS.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Health.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Health_indicator.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Health_system.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Healthcare_reform_in_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hebei.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Henan.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hepatitis_B.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hospital.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hu_Jia_(activist).
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hubei.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Human.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Hygiene.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Immunization.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Infant_mortality.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Infection.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Injury_prevention.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Iodine_deficiency.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Jiang_Yanyong.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Li_Dan_(activist).
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Life_expectancy.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Liu_Shaoqi.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Mainland_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Mao_Zedong.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Maternal_death.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Maternal_health.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Medical_school.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Medicine.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Merck_Group.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_Health_of_the_Peoples_Republic_of_China.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Mosquito.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Moxibustion.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Multiple_drug_resistance.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Night_soil.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Non-communicable_disease.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink One-child_policy.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Orthopedic_surgery.
- Health_in_China wikiPageWikiLink Pancreatitis.