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. 1997 Jun 28;314(7098):1898–1900. doi: 10.1136/bmj.314.7098.1898

Maternal and child health in China.

T Hesketh 1, W X Zhu 1
PMCID: PMC2126969  PMID: 9224139

Abstract

China has made great progress in improving the health of women and children over the past two generations. The success has been attributed to improved living standards, public health measures, and good access to health services. Although overall infant and maternal mortality rates are relatively low there are large differences in patterns of mortality between urban and rural areas. The Chinese have developed a hierarchical network of maternal and child health services, with each level taking a supervisory and teaching role for the level below it. Maternal and child health in China came to international attention in 1995 with the promulgation of the maternal and child health law. In China this was seen as a means of prioritising resources and improving the quality of services, but in the West it was widely described as a law on eugenics.

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