Child-bearing is not just a matter of cutting the umbilical
cord, as has been fatally misunderstood by some female migrant
workers, who have chosen to give birth in illegal clinics and have
died, together with their babies, on the "operating
table."?
Fears of high medical expenses in public hospitals or of births
violating the state's family-planning policy have also stopped such
women from seeking medical attention in licensed hospitals.
Shanghai has recently set up 10 delivery stations especially for
those migrant women, providing the same quality of service as in
public hospitals but at a price only one-third as high.
With an ever-larger floating population of migrants entering the
city, the number of migrant women delivering children has rocketed
in recent years.
"Most migrant workers arrive during their child-bearing ages and
few of them have medical insurance," said Hu Yutang, president of
the Minhang District Migrant Worker Delivery Center.
A survey carried out by the Municipal Health Bureau revealed
that the death rate for births among migrant women was triple that
of locals.
Last year, the city saw a total of 83,713 deliveries, 40 percent
from migrant women. However, among the 29 cases of death during
delivery, 23 were migrant women.
Cheaper safety
A public hospital usually charges about 2,500 yuan (US$300) for
a delivery, not including additional costs for difficult labors of
caesarean births.
In illegal clinics, costs might be only 500 yuan (US$60) if the
baby turns out to be a boy and 100 yuan (US$12) less for a baby
girl, according to Hu. Baby boys are often preferred by rural
citizens.
"Such prices have attracted many poverty-stricken migrant
workers," he said.
The underground clinics make themselves known through illegally
posted advertisements.
"It's very easy to find notices for the underground clinics in
parks and throughout the neighborhood where I live," said Li
Guisheng, 28, a father-to-be from east China's Anhui
Province. "The clinics were actually simply built huts along
the roads, with each usually having only one doctor."
Most of the "doctors" have never received professional training,
simply acquiring a little medical knowledge independently,
according to Zhu Xiaoping, president of the Pudong New Area Women
and Children Health Care Hospital.
"Furthermore, the clinics have almost nothing in the way of
medical equipment and are typically in a bad sanitary condition,"
Zhu said.
The most commonly seen accidents in the clinics are an over-use
of drugs to induce delivery, leading to damage of the womb, severe
bleeding after delivery, injury to the fetus and post-delivery
infection.
"Actually, some birth-inducing medicines, such as oxytocica, are
not over-the-counter, yet somehow, they manage to obtain them
through illegal channels," Zhu said.
Many of the women injured in this way are in a critical
condition by the time they are finally sent to public hospitals for
treatment.
In other cases, large groups of migrant workers from the same
village take on the role of midwives for each other.
"For example, if a group came from the same village in central
China's Henan
Province, they choose a native woman experienced in delivering
babies to serve as the midwife for the whole group. She will
probably have no proper equipment or medicines," Zhu said.
Public hospitals report to the police if they receive patients
who have been transferred from underground clinics or unqualified
midwives.
"But it's hard to track down the culprits because the migrant
workers protect them," she added.
To make matters worse, the migrant rural women have little
health knowledge and rarely undergo adequate health checks during
their pregnancies.
According to the new policy, each pregnant migrant woman will
receive three health checks before delivery, each of which costs 50
yuan (US$6) -- about one-third of the usual price.
In the Minhang District, those who give birth after natural
labor are charged 600 yuan (US$72) each, which includes one-day of
monitoring after delivery in hospital and several basic vaccines
for the new-born babies.
For those with difficult deliveries, extra charges will be made
but these will also be at a steeply discounted price.
The policy and costs in the 10 delivery centers vary somewhat,
but it should be kept within the range from 600 to 800 yuan
(US$72-96).
Hospital dilemma
News of the new centers has quickly spread around the migrant
communities and in the first week alone 26 babies were born at the
Minhang center.
"We learnt about the news from one of our friends and it has
been very good for us," said Ouyang Xiaoju, a woman from
neighboring Jiangsu
Province who just gave birth to a healthy boy.
A migrant woman surnamed Li was lying on the delivery table in
the Minhang District center, waiting for the birth of her second
child.
Monitoring equipment was connected to her body to keep track of
the condition of the fetus, allowing Li to hear the sound of its
rapid heart-beat.
"This is the most advanced equipment available and many other
large hospitals have yet to obtain it, but we have installed it for
the migrant workers," Hu said.
The delivery centers are affiliated to neighborhood or district
hospitals.
The lowering of medical charges has pushed the hospitals to
spend more in building the centers and upgrading their
facilities.
The Minhang center has invested 2.4 million yuan (US$290,000) on
the project, with the hospitals themselves paying the bills.
"In the very beginning, no hospital was willing to be selected
as a migrant worker delivery center. The Municipal Health Bureau
had to choose 10 and compel them to take the step," said Zhu,
president of the Pudong hospital.
The hospitals cannot earn much from the migrant women so the
government subsidizes them to keep the project running
successfully.
"The 600-yuan charge is shared between the hospital, charity
funds and the governmental subsidy," Hu said.
He estimated that Minhang District will provide services for
about 3,000 deliveries by migrant women this year and the center
will start to make a small profit when the figure surpasses
1,000.
Financial stability of the new system is also challenged by
those who give birth at the center but cannot even afford the 600
yuan (US$72) fee.
"Some women have been sent to our hospital just before they are
due to give birth and we have to help them as any hospital should.
But they cannot afford to pay for the service and just slip away in
the middle of the night," Zhu said.
The migrant women are asked to show their temporary resident's
certificates and birth permission papers in order to qualify for
the favorable policy on health examinations and delivery services
offered at some of the new centers.
Each child requires a birth permission certificate from the
government before its birth to ensure that China's family-planning
policy is being followed. An urban citizen can have only one child
and a rural one can have two if the first baby is a girl. Most
rural people hope to have boys.
"It's almost impossible to check whether they have violated the
family-planning policy because it's so easy to get a fake copy of
the permission certificate," Zhu said.
Doctors and nurses, who have been transferred from some of the
neighborhood hospitals to the centers, are even busier now since
they are looking after the migrant women.
"We have to do two to three delivery operations every day at the
center," said Zhuang Chanjuan, a doctor at the Minhang center. "The
17 staff here are on duty 24 hours a day, in shifts."
(Shanghai Star August 22, 2004)