Tough life of Chinese cabbies causes prostatitis

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Tough life of Chinese cabbies causes prostatitis

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From China Daily

This story underlines how chronic stress and tense sitting can cause CP/CPPS
Tough Rides
Updated: 2011-10-23

China's cab drivers are having to pay a price with heavy congestion in the cities, hefty rental charges, growing numbers of private-car owners and long, tiring hours on the roads to make ends meet.

China's taxi drivers, like their brothers elsewhere, are gregarious, loquacious and tenacious. They have to be, because life is tough as tar and they work too hard for their money.

Long hours stuck in traffic jams. Irregular meals, infrequent toilet breaks and no holidays. Hefty monthly charges, escalating fuel prices and the threat of fines at every corner. There is no time to fall sick, even if their daily routine is a sure route to ill health.

That is the life China's cab drivers face every day, and given a choice, they say, they would never have gotten behind the wheel.

In Beijing, more and more taxi drivers are coming from the rural suburbs, and passengers have to strain hard to understand their thick accents, and often have to give laborious instructions to destinations beyond the Second Ring Road.

Most are farmers, laid-off workers or those who had come from menial jobs as laborers, construction workers or railway hands.

The attraction is the monthly take-home pay of between 3,000 to 4,000 yuan a month, triple what they can make from the lower-rung blue-collar jobs.

But it is hard work, very hard work. As soon as a driver starts his shift, he has to pay off the rental fees.

His monthly dues to the cab company ranges from at least 3,000 yuan for a two-man shift to 5,000 yuan if he is on a single shift. He may pay as much or more for gas before he earns any money for himself.

In addition, there are the "miscellaneous expenses". Government inspectors do sudden checks, and impose fines that average about 200 yuan every time a vehicle fails to make the grade in hygiene or in cleanliness.

Their own taxi companies also send out inspectors.

"Once, a guy ran his hand along the underside of the car using white gloves," says 50-year-old Lu Huaping. "To avoid getting my cab dirty, I seldom take passengers to railway stations." Railway stations are notoriously dusty and dirty, according to the cabbies. And it's not just the exterior of the taxi, the drivers must also try to keep the inside spick-and-span.

"I pay 40 yuan a month for these," Kong Jinqi, 45, says, pointing to the white and blue seat covers.

The country may be getting affluent and more people can afford to take cabs, but the competition has also grown in tandem. A better subway system, bus services and a growing population of private car owners eat into their incomes.

But the worst nightmare comes from the congestion on city roads.

Ferrying passengers from point to point used to take only a few minutes, says Li Jinde, 39, a cab driver for seven years.

"Now, it takes about the same time just to turn a corner," he says, as he drives past a traffic accident on Xuanwumen Outer Street, along the South Second Ring Road.

Kong Jinqi, who has also been a cabbie for seven years, says he uses up the same amount of gas whether he's moving on the roads, or idling in traffic, but passengers are charged less in waiting time. Because of this, he prefers to spend his days in the taxi line at the airport, at hotels or the train stations - where we found him.

No holidays or days off

Office workers and business travelers are the cab drivers' best customers. Foreigners hail cabs often, but some drivers admit to a bias against them, mainly because of the language barrier.

Wei Shujun, a cab driver for five years, says he finds the language barrier too troublesome.

Also, most foreigners are not familiar with their destinations, and he finds difficulty explaining the two-yuan fuel surcharge levied on rides longer than 3 kilometers.

Li Jinde, on the other hand, waves off the problem. He simply waives the 2-yuan fee for foreign passengers.

The biggest gripe Lu Huaping has is his inability to take a day off, or have a holiday. He still has to pay the cab company its 200-yuan charges if he takes a rest.

"I'm a worker too, am I not? Why can't I be protected by the Labor Law just like other workers?" he grumbles.

"There are small, private cab companies that don't charge their drivers for their holidays, but these companies are too few."

Paying the cost

The lack of adequate rest points to the biggest price the cabbies have to pay: their health.

A study on Beijing cab drivers' reproductive health, completed earlier this year, found that 56.7 percent of respondents suffered erectile dysfunction. The results also showed that their rate of prostatitis - an inflammation of the prostate gland - is 10 percent higher than that of the general population. Doctors say that prostatitis is the most common problem for drivers because of the long hours they spend behind the wheel.

Some cabbies we interviewed worked 12-hour shifts, every other day, some put in the same hours every day. Others, like Kong, put in 20 hours, 15 days a month.

"I need to earn enough to support the family," he says, explaining that besides his wife and two children, he's also taking care of his elderly parents.

As his fellow cab driver Kong puts it, "We are sacrificing our lives to make money."
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