China gears up to improve end-of-life care   (Xinhua)  Updated: 2006-04-17 08:56  
China has set up an association to address the end-of-life care for one of 
the world's largest aging populations. 
 The Chinese Association for Life Care would act as a nationwide regulatory 
organization in the field of end-of-life care, said Li Jiaxi, director of the 
association at the launch ceremony here Sunday. 
 The association, composed of medical workers, legal workers, and volunteers, 
would engage in the development of end-of-life care, palliative care, 
gerontology research and healthcare for the elderly, Li said. 
 The mission of the association was to regulate services across the nation, 
organizing academic communication and domestic and international exchanges to 
improve the quality of care in China. 
 "Life care" meant the provision of services for elderly people, especially 
dying people, and to allow them to die with dignity. 
 China has three forms of life-care services: a small number of end-of-life 
care hospitals; about 200 end-of-life wards in medical institutions; and 
hospices. 
 The number of people over the age of 60 in China is 143 million, accounting 
for 11 percent of the population.
 
    
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