The Price of Rhetoric: Anticorruption Narratives and Violence Against Doctors in China

In China, violence against doctors and other healthcare professionals has become a worrisome trend. Much as Americans have gotten depressingly used to the expression “school shooting,” Chinese citizens are now familiar with “hospital stabbings.” While still quite rare events relative to China’s enormous population, these incidents are both troubling in themselves and indicative of larger problems, including distrust and anger toward medical professionals and the healthcare establishment.

Could this distrust and anger have something to do with the rhetoric that has accompanied some of China’s high-profile anticorruption campaigns? It is hard, perhaps impossible, to prove a direct link, but consider the following suggestive evidence: Continue reading