At the peak of the Cultural Revolution, the barefoot doctor initiative and the production brigade medical stations where these practitioners worked were established to improve health-care service across rural China. The story of bare foot doctors formally began in 1968, when the People's Daily published a report in September announcing "a revolution in medical education through the growth of the barefoot doctors" in a Shanghai commune; another article that December introduced the "cooperative medi cal service" in the Leyuan commune of Hubei (31 -32). Technically speaking, "barefoot doctors" ceased to exist in 1985, when the health minister Chen Minzhang announced the end of the term's usage in official Chinese discourse (175). Few aspects of Maoist China have acquired global repute as positive as the barefoot doctor program. In the late 1970s, the program even appealed to the World Health Organization (WHO), which promoted it as a model of primary health care and preventive medicine for developing countries (2).