【People's happy life is the greatest human right】

  Clinics "change their faces", college students "take over", and "mobile cars" drive to their doorsteps... In recent years, Xiangyang City, Hubei Province has built a grassroots public health protection net, allowing rural residents to enjoy intimate services and health protection.

  In the health room of Gengzhai Village, Huangji Town, Xiangzhou District, there are consultation rooms, pharmacies, treatment rooms, observation rooms, etc., and various common medicines are neatly placed on the medicine cabinet.

Geng Kaiji, a 73-year-old villager, has chronic diseases and used to go to the hospital in the city.

"Now that there is a clinic in the village, you can come and see. It is also convenient to pay and reimburse. Just swipe your medical insurance card and report how much you spend. It's clear." Geng Kaiji said happily.

  The clinic of Gengzhai Village is a microcosm of Xiangyang's implementation of the basic construction of primary medical and health institutions.

In order to make farmers look sick, and keep minor and common diseases out of the village, Xiangyang City regulates the construction standards of village clinics and solves the problem of construction and security of village clinics.

At present, there are 2,157 village clinics and 4,247 village doctors in the city, realizing full coverage of village-level clinics, and each village clinic has at least one village doctor.

  In the past, many rural clinics faced the problem of aging teams and no successors.

  In 2016, Xiangyang adopted the method of "fee reduction, order training, and targeted employment", and cooperated with Xiangyang Vocational and Technical College to cultivate "universal village doctors".

Liu Xiru, a 24-year-old college student village doctor in Liangshui Village, Wudian Town, Zaoyang City, is one of them.

  The key chronic disease population in Liangshui Village accounts for one-third of the permanent population.

When Liu Qianru first arrived, everyone saw this immature face, and they were a little skeptical, "What does a little girl know, and can treat a disease?" Health Records".

For more than three years, she knew who had high blood pressure, who had diabetes, who took western medicine, and who took traditional Chinese medicine.

  At the end of last year, Zhou Hongming, who was in his 70s in Liangshui Village, suffered from vasculitis and had his limbs amputated. He spent more than a month in the intensive care unit.

After returning home from the treatment, the family was at a loss, so Liu Qianru came to scrub the old man every two days, change his dressing, and monitor his health.

Unexpectedly, after more than half a year, the old man's body slowly became tough.

  "Thanks to Dr. Xiao Liu, otherwise I would still be lying in the hospital. Don't look at the little girl who has not been in the village for a long time, everyone can't live without her." Zhou Hongming praised everyone.

  During her work, Liu Xiru found that the villagers were used to "slight illnesses dragging on, serious illnesses wear them down", and did not take common diseases such as high blood pressure seriously, let alone the awareness of disease prevention.

"My grandfather, grandmother, grandmother, and grandfather all suffer from chronic diseases. In the year of my college entrance examination, my grandmother became hemiplegia due to cerebral infarction caused by high blood pressure. If we could pay attention to it earlier, maybe everything would not have happened..." She often used My own stories tell the villagers about the dangers of chronic diseases, and let the villagers learn to prevent and seek medical treatment in a timely manner.

  "Everyone pays more and more attention to physical health, and also pays attention to a reasonable diet, taking medicine on time, and they are no longer hard when they are sick." Speaking of the changes in the villagers, Liu Qianru showed a gratified smile on her face.

  "From barefoot doctors to college students' village doctors, the team of rural doctors has gradually become younger, more professional and more professional." The relevant person in charge of the Xiangyang Municipal Health Commission introduced that Xiangyang has improved the training mechanism for college students' rural doctors, through order-oriented training, professional technical training, Measures such as raising wages and smoothing promotion channels will gradually increase the attractiveness of village doctor positions, increase the proportion of college students' village doctors, and ensure that college students' village doctors are "retained and used well".

At present, there are 973 village doctors with college degree or above in the city, accounting for 24%.

  At the same time, medical equipment continues to flow to the grassroots.

At the end of 2021, all 111 grass-roots mobile medical and health service vehicles in Xiangyang City will be put into use, covering 97 township health centers and 14 community health service centers in the city, providing convenient and efficient "inspection system" services for the masses, effectively opening up grass-roots health and wellness Serve the "last mile".

  "You can do a health check at the door of the house, it's so convenient!" On May 23, Granny Zhang, who lives in Baifeng Village, Baokang County, Xiangyang City, heard that there was a free check-up in the village that day, and waited early at the door of the village clinic.

After a while, a grassroots mobile medical and health service car drove up.

This service car made the villagers' eyes shine, and they lined up to experience the fast service.

  "With the mobile medical and health service vehicles, we can enter the villages and provide one-stop health services for the villagers, screen diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, and achieve early detection, early diagnosis, and early treatment. . Through automatic data uploading and analysis, the classification and classification management of key populations can be realized, and the workload of grass-roots medical staff can be reduced." Chen Yinzu, president of Xiema Town Health Center, was full of praise for the service car.

  From "an ambulance rang, a pig is raised for nothing" to "slightly ill villages, serious illnesses do not leave the county", these jingle changes truly reflect the aspirations of the people, a series of measures that benefit the current and long-term benefits for the people of Xiangyang It has set up a "protective umbrella" for health and built a "protective wall" for life.

(Our reporter Xia Jing, our correspondent Huang Yajun and Cheng Xiao)