Building Better Health

Building Better Health

Chinese boy receiving medical treatment
  • Building Better Health

    • Part One
      Jill McGivering compares two very different free health systems in the developed world, the British NHS and a US state.
    • Part Two
      Jill McGivering asks if China is doing enough to provide healthcare to 1.3 billion people and what it can learn from the struggles in the developed world.

Jill McGivering investigates if there can be a health system which provides universal access, quality care and a healthier population at an acceptable price.

With the pressures on health spending (ageing populations, medical advances and more treatments, different diseases), is it possible to meet everyone's needs and achieve a goal of universal access while keeping costs under control?

How should a health system work? Has the world learnt any basic lessons from past triumphs and mistakes?

How does a government make sure every citizen, rich or poor, has the medical care they need? Who should employ doctors and nurses and run hospitals and clinics? The taxpayer or the private sector?

Part Two


Jill McGivering travels to China to see how this fast changing country is providing health care to a population of 1.3 billion people.

Under Mao Tse-tung, the country used a basic but effective network of so-called "barefoot doctors".

But since the introduction of sweeping economic reforms in the past two decades, everything has changed.

The reforms have brought new wealth but the collapse of many local clinics and free services mean that poorer families simply can't afford health care and serious illness can bankrupt them.

The Chinese government is now struggling to fill the gap, pouring millions of dollars into safety-net schemes.

But is it doing enough and what can it learn from the struggles in the developed world?

First broadcast on 23 July 2008.

Terms of Use

The BBC Podcasts are for your personal non-commercial use only.

All title, ownership rights and intellectual property rights in and to the BBC Podcasts shall remain the property of the BBC or third parties.

You may not edit, alter, adapt or add to the BBC Podcast in any way. The BBC Podcasts are made available by the BBC on an "as is" and "as available" basis and the BBC gives no warranty of any kind in relation to the BBC Podcast.

To the maximum extent permitted by law the BBC will not be liable for any loss or damage which you may suffer as a result of or connected to the download or use of the BBC Podcasts.

See the full BBC Podcast: Standard Licence Terms here.