Chinese doctors call for insurance coverage for weight-loss drugs
Some doctors in China want national insurance coverage for weight-loss drugs to tackle endemic obesity, medical professionals told Reuters in rare instances of public advocacy, halfway through a decade in which the number of people considered overweight is set to increase.
Obesity is China's sixth leading risk factor in disability and death, yet long-term weight-loss drugs that doctors have said could help reduce its prevalence can cost half a patient's salary.
"Rising obesity rates combined with the high cost of treatment drugs are straining the healthcare system, prompting physicians to address access gaps," said Yanzhong Huang, senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Unhealthy meals and stressful or less physically demanding jobs are pushing the rate of overweight or obese people to over 65% by 2030, in the world's second-most populous country with 1.4 billion people.
The government introduced its first set of guidelines last year to standardise the diagnosis and treatment of obesity. Yet it does not plan to include weight-loss drugs in the national medical insurance scheme, instead directing funds elsewhere.
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