from wikipedia:
Barefoot doctors (Chinese: 赤脚医生 pinyin: chìjiǎo yīshēng) are farmers who received minimal basic medical and paramedical training and worked in rural villages in the People's Republic of China. Their purpose was to bring health care to rural areas where urban-trained doctors would not settle. They promoted basic hygiene, preventive health care, and family planning and treated common illnesses. The name comes from southern farmers, who would often work barefoot in the rice paddies. There were previous scattered experiments with community health workers in the People’s Republic of China, but with Mao Zedong’s famous healthcare speech in 1965 it became institutionalized. In his speech, Mao Zedong criticized the urban bias of the medical system of the time, and called for a system with greater focus on the well being of the rural population.[1] China’s health policy changed quickly after this speech and in 1968, the barefoot doctors program became integrated into national policy.[1] These programs were called “rural cooperative medical systems” (RCMS) and strove to include community participation with the rural provision of health services.[2] Barefoot doctors became a part of the Cultural Revolution, which also radically diminished the influence of the Weishengbu, China's health ministry, which was dominated by Western-trained doctors.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
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I forgot to mention that the barefoot doctors started in 1968 and was abolished 1981. I posted this information because even though it's been decades since this program, it (and they) have affected rural people and idealists even today.
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