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北京医改“组合拳”:薪酬向紧缺学科倾斜 资源布局“疏解补缺”
Zhong Guo Jing Ying Bao·2025-07-28 22:14

Core Viewpoint - Beijing's healthcare reform, inspired by the Sanming model, has shown significant results, including a 12.8 percentage point increase in medical service revenue share and the adjustment of over 8,800 medical service prices [1][2]. Group 1: Efficient Coordination - The establishment of a strong leadership system for the coordinated development of healthcare, medical insurance, and pharmaceuticals ("three medicines") is a core experience from the Sanming reform [2]. - A unified management structure led by a senior city official ensures policy coordination, information sharing, and regulatory collaboration across all 16 districts in Beijing [2]. - A dynamic adjustment mechanism for medical service prices has been implemented, with nearly 400 items adjusted regularly and 134 new items added, leading to a significant increase in medical service revenue [2]. Group 2: Incentivizing Healthcare Personnel - Salary reform is a key aspect of the healthcare reform, aimed at motivating healthcare workers while maintaining the public nature of public hospitals [3]. - A performance-based salary management mechanism has been established, particularly supporting underdeveloped specialties like pediatrics, ensuring their salaries are at least 1.2 times the average salary of the institution [3]. - The focus on optimizing salary structures has resulted in fixed salaries constituting over 50% of total compensation for healthcare workers, providing them with stable income and enabling better patient service [3]. Group 3: Balanced Resource Allocation - Beijing is promoting balanced healthcare resource allocation through three main strategies: "decongestion, filling gaps, and medical alliances" [4]. - The city has successfully decongested over 2,700 hospital beds from central urban areas, with the number of hospital beds per thousand people in new urban areas increasing by approximately 14% since 2020 [4]. - Projects aimed at enhancing pediatric, mental health, traditional Chinese medicine, and infectious disease resources are underway to better match healthcare supply with public health needs [4].