About 2,400 people with leprosy were treated without charge
between 2000 and 2005.
According to Wang Xinxian, vice chairman of the China Disabled Persons'
Federation, there are now about 230,000 leprosy sufferers
across the country, half of whom are disabled by the infectious
disease.
During the 10th Five-Year Guideline period (2001-2005), 12
medical teams were dispatched to carry out free treatment on 2,438
disabled lepers in 11 provinces and regions.
The program cost 8.4 million yuan (US$1.04 million), which was
paid from the lottery-based public benefit fund operated by the
federation.
"The aid program has not only played a positive role in reducing
the bias toward leprosy patients, but also helped to train medical
workers in treating the disease," Wang said on January 24 at a
rally held in?Daxin County, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region,
which was jointly sponsored by the China Disabled Persons'
Federation and the Ministry of Health to commend units and
individuals that had scored outstanding achievements in the
program.
Wang said that during the country's 11th Five-Year Guideline
period (2006-2010), his federation will continue to provide leprosy
patients with more help by raising the scale and standard of
relief. He also appealed to the public to end discrimination
against leprosy sufferers.
Leprosy is one of the oldest recorded diseases in the world and
was first mentioned in writing in 600 BC. The bacillus that causes
the disease can incubate in the human body for up to 20 years. It
is transmitted via droplets from the nose or mouth during contact
with untreated, infected sufferers.
It is a chronic disease characterized by ulcers of the skin,
bone and internal organs that can lead to the loss of sensation,
paralysis, gangrene and deformation of the limbs.
World Leprosy Day is celebrated all over the world on the last
Sunday of January, and this year it falls on January 29, Wang
said.
(Xinhua News Agency, China Disabled Persons' Federation, January
26, 2006)