The Chinese government is launching a program to 
provide basic occupational health services for migrant workers this year. 
The pilot scheme in 20 counties over 10 provinces comes as the Ministry of 
Health prepares to conduct a survey on the occupational health of migrant 
workers, said a ministry official Monday. 
The ministry has listed the study as a priority, said Su Zhi, deputy head of 
the Division of Supervision under the ministry. 
The basic occupational health services would be paid for by employers under 
existing employment laws, but the ministry has asked the State Council to 
establish a fund to help cover the costs of migrant workers' healthcare in cases 
of occupational illness and injury. 
The number of migrant workers is estimated at 120 million and the workforce 
in rural enterprises amounts to 80 million, according to a report released by 
the State Council. 
Most migrant workers in cities and workers in rural enterprises were employed 
in arduous and harmful jobs, but had no medical insurance and little awareness 
of safety issues, making them a high-risk group of occupational diseases, said 
Li Dehong, an expert with the China Center for Disease Control. 
Moreover, 90 percent of enterprises were small or medium-sized and had little 
awareness of occupational hazards and provided few safety measures for their 
staff, said Health Vice-Minister Chen Xiaohong. 
The ministry would set up a pilot network to improve reporting and monitoring 
of occupational diseases as the existing reporting system was incomplete, said 
Su Zhi. 
Health files should be set up at migrant workers' hometowns, to which they 
usually returned during the traditional new year period, he said. 
Last year, the ministry received 12,212 reports of occupational diseases, 
75.11 percent of which were pneumoconiosis, a chronic disease of the lungs 
resulting from long-term inhalation of dust and primarily affecting miners, 
sandblasters and metal grinders. 
In addition, more than 200 cases of acute occupational poisoning occurred 
every year, affecting hundreds of people and causing millions of yuan in 
economic losses, said Chen Xiaohong. 
The Ministry of Health and the State Administration of Work Safety would 
jointly improve monitoring of occupational disease control and educate employers 
on the law and social responsibility, he said. 
The two departments and the All-China Federation of Trade Unions jointly 
awarded 56 enterprises with the accolade of "State model enterprise on 
occupational health" on Monday. They were judged on strict standards based on 
existing guidelines and regulations, funding, working conditions and equipment, 
and provision of health insurance for their workers. 
The enterprises are expected to share and publicize their experience with 
other enterprises in promoting occupational health.