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Asia Healthcare Blog's mission is to provide a global audience with balanced commentary on important healthcare topics from Southeast Asia, our planet's most densely populated region and it's most active pathogen factory. Most of our energies go into reporting on China, and we occasionally post translations from Chinese publications, as well.
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China’s Naked Government Experiment Could Work for Hospitals, Too
Officials, in a Sichuan township, have initiated a public accountability experiment, posting their personal expenditures for the first two months of the year online. Netizens have dubbed the effort China’s first case of ‘Naked Government’. AKA, transparent government. The Sichuan township’s efforts are significant because the officials, so far, have been very open about their spending.
Stan Abrams points out that though the reporting is not perfect, the very fact that Baimiao town is reporting how much they spend on dining – 65 percent of their spending in the first two months of this year – is something worthy of our attention.
It seems like a big deal to me, too. Here’s the healthcare angle. This precedent can and should be applied to China’s public hospitals. All sources of revenue at the hospital should be disclosed, department by department.
Public reporting of department earnings, along with the ratio of medical personnel to patients in those departments would help ease pressure on the health system by revealing to the public where the less burdened hospital departments. Right now if I go to Chaoyang Hospital to see the ENT doctor, but there is a six hour wait to see that doctor, no one there will refer me to a clinic or hospital down the street, wanting to keep the funds for themselves. If I could see, online, where there are less burdened ENT departments I could save myself several hours.
This makes sense to me. What about you?