Asia Healthcare Blog
Exploring the intersection of investment and development, in Asia



China, HK, Macau

April 28, 2010

HIV/AIDS Ban on Foreigners coming to China lifted

chinese visa

China’s come a long way from the days when it labeled HIV/AIDS as a the foreign devils’ disease.  Though lifting the ban on foreigners with HIV/AIDS is a reason to cheer, the Chinese public still has a very rudimentary understanding of what HIV/AIDS is and how it is transmitted.  Plus, as readers familiar with China are well aware of, there’s a difference between an announcement proclaiming the ban lifted, and the ban actually being lifted.  Let’s wait and see what happens before any gets too excited about this development, but it’s still worth a cheer and a pint or two at your local Sinology club.

BEIJING – The Chinese government announced Tuesday the lifting of the 20-year-old ban on entry for foreigners with HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases and leprosy.

According to a statement released Tuesday by the State Council, after gaining more knowledge about the diseases, the government has realized that such ban has a very limited effect in preventing and controlling diseases in the country. It has, instead, caused inconvenience for the country when hosting various international activities.

The revision comes days ahead of the opening of the Shanghai World Expo. The government temporarily lifted the ban for various large-scale events, including the 1990 Beijing Asian Games, the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995 and the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Mao Qun’an, spokesman for the Ministry of Health, said the groundwork for the lifting of the ban began years ago. The ministry had been advocating lifting the restriction since the Beijing Olympic Games. It took a few more years only because of the necessary procedures.

The two decisions altered regulations for the Border Quarantine Law and the Law on Control of the Entry and Exit of Aliens, which set down the ban in the 1980s.

The previous ban was made in accordance with the “limited knowledge about HIV/AIDS and other diseases,” the statement said.

Zhang Beichuan, a medical professor with Qingdao University and a front-runner in advocating the rights of people living with HIV (PLWHIV), said it’s a move of huge progress.

“Previously, China viewed HIV/AIDS as an imported disease related to a corrupted lifestyle. But now the government handles it with a public health perspective,” he said.

He Tiantian, a woman in her 30s living with HIV and an AIDS activist, said, “This revision shows us a silver lining, because we have been advocating for the rights of PLWHIV for years, and now we know we didn’t do it in vain.”

“However, it still takes time to end discrimination, but the change in the government’s stance will help change the public’s attitude towards this group of people,” she added.

According to the health ministry, the estimated number of people living with HIV in China had reached 740,000 by October 2009, with deaths caused by AIDS totalling 49,845 since the first case was reported in 1985.

The statement said the lifting of the ban won’t bring an outbreak of disease in the country as scientific research has proved daily contact doesn’t cause infection.

HIV/AIDS is usually transmitted through blood, sex and from mother to infant. Leprosy is usually transmitted through skin injuries.

Meanwhile, the government also narrowed the restrictive scope for mentally ill and tuberculosis patients to only “severe mental patients” and those with infectious tuberculosis.

According to the statement, not all tuberculosis diseases are infectious and mental patients won’t harm the country’s social order and personal safety.

Statistics show that currently 110 countries and regions around the world have no ban on entry for HIV/AIDS carriers. The United States and Republic of Korea both lifted the ban in January.



About the Author

Damjan Denoble
Damjan co-founded Asia Healthcare Blog with James Flanagan in 2009. He is currently a law student in his second year at The University of Michigan Law School. Last summer he clerked at the offices of Harris & Moure, a boutique international law firm widely admired for its China Law Blog. He graduated from Duke University in 2007, with a B.A. in Public Policy, concentration in health policy.




2 Comments


  1. Samuel

    Nice timing! I’m just about to write an article on the Chinese opinion of HIV/AIDs and the sex education system!

    I wonder if this ban will be imposed again once the Expo is over..


  2. [...] a horrendous record of stigma and discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS. Despite the official lifting of the ban on foreigners with HIV/AIDS, enforcement of the law appears to remain unchanged, and one has to wonder was lies behind the [...]



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