CCP's Military No.1 in Performing Organ Transplants (Photos)
By Zhen Jun
(Clearwisdom.net) It has been over 20 years since China's
army, under the control of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP),
opened fire on students and citizens in the Tiananmen Square
Massacre on June 4, 1989. During the last 20 years, it has not been
involved in any war outside of China, and the peace-keeping force
it has sent abroad is only an engineering battalion. However, the
communist regime's military forces have set a world record in the
last ten years in performing organ transplant operations. The
current head of the Ministry of Health of the General Logistics
Department, Major General Zhang Yanling, who used to serve as
President of the No. 2 Military Medical University, openly said in
a statement published on Xinhua.net, "In 1978, there were only
three hospitals in the entire military forces that were able to
perform kidney transplants. Now, we have 40 hospitals capable of
conducting organ transplants of liver, kidney, heart, lungs and
multi-organ transplants, making up a quarter of the total number of
organ transplants in China."
According to the World Organization to Investigate the
Persecution of Falun Gong (WOIPFG), of the over 150 army hospitals
in China, many of them are engaged in organ transplants. Browsing
the websites of these hospitals, one can easily see that the number
of organ transplants carried out by the military hospitals is
rather shocking, and these published figures are only the
officially sanctioned numbers. That is, these numbers are only the
tip of the iceberg. The actual figure has yet to be revealed. Dong Jiahong, Director of the Hepatobiliary Surgery Department
of the General Hospital of the People's Liberation Army (PLA 301
Hospital), was transferred to Beijing in 2006, after he led an
organ transplant team that carried out 700 liver transplants using
new surgical technology at the Southwest Hospital of the Third
Military Medical University in Chongqing. The Department of
Hepatobiliary Surgery of Southwest Hospital was identified as a key
laboratory in the military forces for liver transplants in 2001. In
2005 this hospital was approved by the General Logistics Department
to become an Organ Transplant Center of the PLA, with a capacity
for conducting six liver transplants simultaneously and a total
number of 200 liver transplants per annum. The center also helps
and guides 21 medical institutions in the provinces of Jiangsu,
Shandong, Guangdong, Shaanxi, Henan, Yunnan, Sichuan, Xinjiang,
Guizhou, Fujian, and Guangxi in their development in the area of
liver transplants. The hospital has also become a training center
for teaching the surgical technology of liver transplantation. Dong Jiahong, Director of the Hepatobiliary
Surgery Department of the General Hospital of the People's
Liberation Army The Organ Transplant Research Institute of Changzheng Hospital,
affiliated with the No. 2 Military Medical University, was
established in December 2003 with the approval of the General
Logistics Department of the PLA. Between April 22 and 30, 2005,
just nine days, the research institute carried out 16 liver
transplants and 15 kidney transplants. As its websites boasted, "It
has broken a new record in terms of transplants per unit time." The PLA No. 452 Hospital is located in Sichuan Province. In
about 2000, the hospital was poorly equipped and there was a
shortage of doctors. The hospital had debts of close to 10 million
yuan, and it was locally regarded as a township level hospital.
In 2002, the head of the hospital, Zhang Cong, signed an agreement
with a local entrepreneur, who invested 8 million yuan in the
hospital to conduct kidney transplants. During the time they
cooperated, the entrepreneur would give the hospital 1.2 million
per year and offer free services to the army. As a result, the No.
452 Hospital carried out 331 kidney transplants, rating it No.1 in
Sichuan Province. In 2007, after the hospital made a profit of 7
million yuan, it purchased all the facilities and the operation
ownership from the entrepreneur at a cost of 4 million yuan. What
the No. 452 Hospital did attracted the attention of the PLA health
system, and many other military hospitals followed suit. Zhang Cong, Head of No. 452 Hospital Regarding other military hospitals, the General Hospital of
Jinan Military Zone is a medium-sized hospital, but it has carried
out over 1500 kidney transplants since 1978. Since 1999, the number
of kidney transplants increased to over 100 per year. The General
Hospital of Chengdu Military Zone carried out eight kidney
transplants in five days. There was a report carried on page B4 of
Liaoxi Business Press on May 23, 2006, entitled "The noble
realm and pursuit of a military doctor." The report said that Chen
Rongshan, Director and Chief Surgeon of the Urology Surgery Center
of the No. 250 Hospital of the PLA, had in the last few years "...
carried out as many as 568 kidney transplants, with a success rate
of 100 percent, and around 98 percent of the patients lived more
than one year, ... his professional skills rate No.1 in Liaoxi, and
many patients came to him for treatment, including patients from
Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea and Malaysia." War Doesn't Drive Organ Transplants The most detailed US army report on injuries in a time of war is
the WDMET report, in which it collected data on casualties. Of all
casualties, 37.2 percent suffered head injuries, 36.4 percent
suffered chest injuries, and only 9.2 percent suffered fatal
injuries in the abdominal area. As the US army began to use more
Kevlar bullet-proof vests, the torso got more protection, and the
ratio of injuries to the unprotected limbs increased by a large
margin. Doctors in the US army at the front lines were mostly those
that specialized in trauma surgery, general surgery, and bone
surgery. The chances of fatal injury to the liver from a gunshot in
the battlefield was not high. The US army has been engaged during the last 50 years. However,
its best equipped Walter Reed Army Medical Center has only
conducted around 30 organ transplants per year. Of the 250
hospitals in the US that carry out organ transplants, only 8 of
them are affiliated with a VA Hospital (for veteran servicemen).
Moreover, these hospitals have to invite local doctors to conduct
the transplant operations; the army hospitals only provide the
facilities. Therefore, organ transplants are carried out in
cooperation with nearby large hospitals. For example, the US army
hospital in Portland was the first to conduct liver transplants
among the US army hospitals. From 1989 to date, it has only
operated on 252 cases. However, the Department of Hepatobiliary
Surgery of Southwest Hospital carried out over 200 liver
transplants in one year, equivalent to the total number of liver
transplants carried out in a US army hospital of a similar level in
20 years. Furthermore, Shi Bingyi, director of the Organ Transplant
Center in the No. 2 Affiliated Hospital to the PLA General
Hospital, has in recent years personally completed over 1580 kidney
transplants and over 360 liver transplants. In comparison, the
total number of organ transplants carried out in the largest US
army hospital per year doesn't even make up a rounding error for
the number of the organ transplants done by the armed forces in
China. Shi Bingyi, Director of the Organ Transplant
Center in No. 2 Affiliated Hospital to the PLA General Hospital Why Does an Army Not at War Engage in Organ
Transplants? Since the 1980s, the Chinese military hospitals have begun to
offer services to society at large for a fee, and the military
hospitals' goal is no longer to "maximize effect" but, instead, to
"maximize profit." Since the reforms in the medical market in the
early 1990s, medical service became commercialized and now pursues
profits. For military hospitals, this change was like a timely
rainfall, because offering their services internally would never
result in profits. However, there was much profit to be made by
offering services outside the military, and there was nothing to
restrain them. In a very short time the military hospitals started
to view treatment of soldiers as a burden, and they have gone from
not offering full treatment in the beginning to rejecting treatment
of soldiers altogether. Moreover, the PLA military hospitals have
now turned into "standard local hospitals and "sanatoriums" for
high-ranking officers, and these hospitals have long since gone
from "serving soldiers" to "serving officers" and "serving for
money." All military hospitals charge the same fees as local hospitals,
and they operate like local hospitals. The income from medicines in
most army hospitals account for over half of the total income from
medical treatment. In fact, army hospitals also function as local
hospitals; the only differences are that military hospitals are
totally funded by the military budget and the staff is in uniform
and managed by the military system. The military hospitals saw that potentially huge profits were to
be made in organ transplants, so they pushed forward organ
transplantations without restraint and placed themselves in an
advantageous position by having a large source of organs, which
could not be matched by local hospitals. For example, a reporter
from Sound of Hope International Radio Network contacted Li
Honghui, director of the Kidney Transplant Center of Yuquan
Hospital, the No. 2 Affiliated Hospital of Qinghua University. Li
Honghui told the reporter that because there were more sources of
organs in Chengdu City in Sichuan, he was transferred there to help
out at the local military hospitals. Xu Yahong, who has over 22
years of work experience at an air force hospital in Chengdu, said
that he personally carried out over 500 organ transplants, at an
average of over 100 per year in the last two or three years. He
also directly told the reporter on the phone that they used kidneys
from Falun Gong practitioners. Dong Jiahong, Director of the Hepatobiliary Surgery Department
of the General Hospital of the PLA, made the following calculation
during an interview with Xinhua.net: If a liver cancer patient has
an operation to remove his liver at a three A-level provincial
hospitals, the average cost for such an operation is 20,000 to
30,000 yuan, but the cost for a liver transplant is ten times that.
A liver transplant would cost around 200,000 yuan. On top of this,
the patient would need to take anti-rejection medication for the
rest of his life, which would cost 50,000 to 100,000 yuan per year.
Consequently, organ transplants not only result in huge profits
from the operations themselves, but because the patients have to
take medication for the rest of their lives, hospitals continue to
make huge profits for years to come. It is like a live bank deposit
account, which gets interest every year. An independent investigative report by David Matas and David
Kilgour quoted website information published by the Organ
Transplant Center of the 309 Clinical Section of the PLA General
Hospital in April 2002: "The Organ Transplant Center is the key
profit-making department in our section. The gross income in 2003
was 16.07 million yuan, and from January to June in 2004 it was
13.57 million yuan. This year (2004), we expect it to exceed 30
million yuan." When the pursuit of profit intersected with persecution policies
(especially the persecution of Falun Gong), the unique profession
of organ transplantation fit both bills, and thus it developed very
rapidly in military hospitals of the Communist regime.


Posting date: 11/30/2009
Category: Other Related Articles
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2009/11/17/212749.html
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