logo
China worker suffers severe chest pain, refuses surgery, doctor pays US$4,200 for treatment

China worker suffers severe chest pain, refuses surgery, doctor pays US$4,200 for treatment

A doctor in southern China paid 30,000 yuan (US$4,200) out of his own pocket to cover the medical bills of a patient who refused to undergo emergency surgery because of the cost.
The incident unfolded in Dongguan, Guangdong province on June 30, when a migrant factory worker, surnamed Zhang, felt a searing pain in his chest and back while he was working, the Guangzhou Daily reported.
After Zhang, 38, arrived at a hospital in Xiegang Town, Dongguan City, doctors diagnosed a serious cardiovascular disorder.
A doctor from the cardiovascular department, Lu Jiongbin, told Zhang that he needed immediate surgery and that there was a 60 per cent possibility that he would die otherwise.
But Zhang refused to have the operation or to be hospitalised, saying he just wanted to go home to his village in Shaanxi province, northwestern China.
After Zhang had the potentially life-saving surgery, his family travelled to the hospital to thank the doctors. Photo: 163.com
'I do not want to receive any treatment. If I die, it is fine,' he told medical staff.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China courier puts sick daughter in delivery box while working as she can't afford childcare
China courier puts sick daughter in delivery box while working as she can't afford childcare

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China courier puts sick daughter in delivery box while working as she can't afford childcare

A Chinese mother who delivered food with her 4-year-old sick daughter inside a meal-carrying box so that she could look after her has received sympathy online. The woman, surnamed Zhu, and her child were caught on camera by an online influencer in eastern China's Anhui province. The 25-year-old delivered food on an electric bicycle in the summer heat while carrying her daughter in the box attached to the vehicle. The girl has a vein-detained needle on one hand and a chemo port on her chest. Zhu feeds her four-year-old daughter between deliveries as she sits in the courier box. Photo: Douyin Her mother, surnamed Zhu, said the girl, Nuoxi, was diagnosed with a tumour two years ago.

‘Silver Yuan': China's geriatric healthcare a US$134 billion market by 2035, Goldman says
‘Silver Yuan': China's geriatric healthcare a US$134 billion market by 2035, Goldman says

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Silver Yuan': China's geriatric healthcare a US$134 billion market by 2035, Goldman says

China's geriatric healthcare industry is projected to be worth 963 billion yuan (US$134 billion) over the next decade, as an expanding middle class amid a rapidly ageing population increases the need and willingness to spend, according to a report by Goldman Sachs. Wealthy Chinese consumers were likely to spend three times more than their peers on post-retirement healthcare over the next decade, the US bank said in a report published on Monday, a trend that augurs well for the growth of the so-called silver economy. Consumers with disposable assets of at least 3 million yuan were projected to increase their annual spending on healthcare by 14.3 per cent over the next decade, Goldman said. Spending by this group of wealthy pensioners may balloon fourfold from 221 billion yuan last year. The rise of the so-called silver yuan presents growth opportunities for geriatric healthcare services that were not currently covered in state health insurance policies, such as cataract surgeries, dental implants, vaccines against shingles and the respiratory syncytial virus, according to the report. Medical workers provide free care to the elderly in Liupanshui, southwest China's Guizhou province, October 14, 2021. Photo: Xinhua This group of consumers was also more likely to spend money on early screening, preventive care, and premium treatment such as specialised medications, consumables, higher-quality healthcare services, post-treatment nursing and rehabilitation, the report said.

New Chinese medicinal wines in Hong Kong meld traditional ingredients with modern mixology
New Chinese medicinal wines in Hong Kong meld traditional ingredients with modern mixology

South China Morning Post

time2 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

New Chinese medicinal wines in Hong Kong meld traditional ingredients with modern mixology

Peek along the bottom shelves of Hong Kong supermarkets and grocery stores and you might see a category of booze once popular with both rich and poor: medicinal wines. Advertisement Yellow or rice wines infused with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) ingredients were well loved among Hongkongers – they drank them 'for health' – until the 1980s and '90s. Some of the better-known medicinal wine labels were Shi Quan Da Bu Jiu – 'the ten complete wellness wine' – from mainland China, and Yomeishu – 'wellness wine' in Japanese – from Japan. They even had television advertisements. While these elixirs sank into obscurity in the decades that followed, bartender Dennis Mak and TCM practitioner James Ting are planning to revive the wines-for-wellness concept. Dennis Mak and James Ting's drinks brand Magnolia Lab currently offers two botanical liqueurs, Magnolia and Roselle. Photo: Magnolia Lab In 2019, the duo created Magnolia Lab, a drinks brand that combines traditional herbal and medicinal wines with modern mixology.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store