Wed, May 09, 2012
China > Mainland

Lhasa offers free health checks for monks

2012-05-09 05:42:21 GMT2012-05-09 13:42:21(Beijing Time)  Xinhua English

LHASA, May 9 (Xinhua) -- Norbu Gyaltsen feels lucky that at 60, he is in perfect health.

"My health check shows I'm healthy, unlike many of my peers who are suffering high blood pressures," said the monk at Drepung Monastery, one of the largest monasteries in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet autonomous region.

Norbu Gyaltsen had the check on Wednesday.

He was among more than 4,000 Lhasa-based monks and nuns who are receiving health checks for free at leading public hospitals in a program that began on Saturday.

The checks, financed by Lhasa's city government, include blood tests, chest X-rays, cardiogram and ultrasound scans of the abdomen to check the clergy's general health, said Du Xiang, a physician with the General Hospital of Tibet's regional command of the People's Liberation Army.

He said the checks were essential in screening for metabolic diseases as well as ailments related to the plateau residents' diets and lifestyles.

Du's hospital is receiving more than 900 monks from monasteries in downtown Lhasa from Monday to Thursday.

"Monks in Lhasa have easy access to medication," according to Ngawang Tobjor from Drepung Monastery. "But few people receive routine health checks -- we see a doctor only when we are really sick."

A routine, free health check would help detect potential diseases and improve the quality of their lives, he said.

Ten hospitals are providing the health checks for monks, including three in Lhasa's city proper and seven in its rural counties, the city government announced in a press release.

It said the checks will be carried out annually and individual health archives will be kept for each patient.

It is unclear when the scheme will be expanded to other parts of Tibet.

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