Medical services in the Tibet autonomous region have notably improved in recent years, but there is still a big gap between the care available in Tibet and China's developed provinces, a hospital official and longtime physician said.
Dr Tsewang Rigzin, 54, deputy head of the Nagqu People's Hospital in the region's Nagqu prefecture and a delegate to the National People's Congress (Special Coverage), brought proposals to improve remote medical services to the country's top legislative body.
Born in the prefecture's Biru county, Tsewang has worked as a doctor there for 27 years and said he always has the rural people in his heart when he attends the two sessions.
At this session in Beijing, his fourth as a delegate, Tsewang recommended bringing in more medical talent to support medicine in the region.
"We are not lacking advanced equipment, but the talents who actually know how to use the equipment," Tsewang Rigzin. "It is not a gap of equipment, but a gap of talent."
The hospital where he works is located on a grassland where the average altitude is more than 4,500 meters above sea level. In such a harsh environment, many people find it hard to breathe and keeping medical staff for a length of time is challenging, Tsewang said.
A long-term mechanism is needed to keep skilled medical professionals in remote areas such at Tibet's high plateau, said Tsewang, a graduate of Tibet Nationality University.
Tsewang's hospital, which has a medical staff of about 200, plans to strengthen staff training, and it has sustainable cooperative projects with big hospitals in other Chinese provinces.
"We plan to have 30 of our doctors trained in the hospitals of the inland provinces of Zhejiang and Liaoning, and these two provinces have projects in our hospital as part their Tibet-aid projects," he said.