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New York Times' China Propaganda Crisis Sources Source #1 -
New York Times Original Video - Inside China's Predatory Health Care System

Source #2 -
New York Times Original Video - How Capitalism Ruined China’s Health Care System

Source #3 -
New York Times Original Article with subtitle "Despite health insurance, terminally ill patients have to hunt around the world and on the internet for ways to stay alive"

Source #4 -
Details of the life of the lady who died from cancer in the film.

Source #5 -
This is the number 1 reason Americans file for bankruptcy.

Source #6 -
Many cancer patients must face bankruptcy or die.

Source #7 -
42 percent of new cancer patients lose their life savings ($92,000 on average).

Source #8 -
Shanghai Cancer Center is a public hospital.

Source #9 -
All the private hospitals in China combined make less than 10% the revenue that public hospitals do.

Source #10 -
The vast majority of private hospitals in China have less than 100 beds and only a 40% occupancy rate.

Source #11 -
The largest public hospitals in China can treat well over 20,000 people in one single day.
Note: This hospital now has over 10,000 beds and the patients per day has gone up accordingly.

Source #12 -
China’s already committed to moving hospitals to be completely nonprofit by next year.

Source #13 -
95% of Chinese people have health insurance.

Source #14 -
Top cancer hospitals in America (#1 is MD Anderson).

Source #15 -
It costs $40,000 to talk to one doctor one time if you have no insurance.

Source #16 -
Wechat article on medium.com.

Source #17 -
You can use this website and app to book an appointment at no additional cost.

Source #18 -
You can use this website and app to book an appointment, again at no additional cost. Extra features.

Source #19 -
In America there is one hospital for every 52,000 people.

Source #20 -
In China, there is one hospital for every 44,000 people.

Source #21 -
The two largest hospitals in America have under 2,500 beds.

Source #22 -
In China, the two largest hospitals both have over 10,000 beds. (1)

Source #23 -
In China, the two largest hospitals both have over 10,000 beds. (2)

Source #24 -
The largest hospital in America wouldn’t even be in the top 100 largest hospitals in China.

Source #25 -
That hospital has over 2,000 medical staff working at it, over 500 of which are doctors.

Source #26 -
That hospital does about 3,500 outpatient and emergency visits per day.

Source #27 -
WHO OECD does not track general practitioners per person for China. (Health > Health Care Resources > Physicians by Category)

Source #28 -
China is not experiencing a critical shortage of doctors, nurses or midwives. (Page 18)

Source #29 -
Cuba, Kuwait, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and North Korea have more doctors per person than America.

Source #30 -
Americans pay eight times as much out of pocket for health care as Chinese people do. (Indicators > Financing Sources > Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPS) per Capita in US$)

Source #31 -
New AMA policy calls for research on violence against physicians.

Source #32 -
Violence against emergency room staffers seen as increasing.

Source #33 -
Assaults against ER physicians and staff rising.

Source #34 -
In America nurses face workplace violence rates higher than in any other industry.

Source #35 -
Hospital violence happens so often that health care workers consider it part of the job.

Source #36 -
Video about hospital violence in America.

Source #37 -
Somebody typed those words – “it happens so often they even have a word for it (yinao).”

Source #38 -
In American hospitals assault, burglary, theft, vandalism, disorderly conduct, motor vehicle theft, rape, murder are all up.

Source #39 -
during that same time, medical disputes and hospital-related crimes went down in China, not up.

Source #40 -
The cancer rate for women in America is 15% higher than in China.

Source #41 -
The lung cancer rate for women is 19% higher in America than in China.

Source #42 -
The cancer death rate in China is the same (+/- 5%) as Denmark, Poland, Netherlands, France and the United Kingdom.

Source #43 -
They call the lady “Ms. Yao” and then later talk about her son moving in with his parents.

Source #44 -
They posted the video on the wrong article back in September.

Source #45 -
They released the right article in November, with another wrong video.

Source #46 -
She said the family lives in the province of Liaoning, but they actually live over 500 miles away in a different province – Hebei.

Additional - They released another article which incorrectly states the video was filmed "in Beijing, Shanghai and Anhui Province. (No mention of Hebei). There is also a typo (double colons)."