China Daily (Hong Kong)

Wuxi plans state-of-the-art public health data platform

- By CAI JINGWEN in Wuxi, Jiangsu caijingwen@chinadaily.com.cn

To further integrate the internet of things technology and the healthcare industry, Wuxi, East China’s Jiangsu province, plans to shape a healthcare informatio­n system. It will include a smart healthcare management platform and four centers for private and public health data and demographi­c analysis.

The city has attracted global giants and encouraged local firms to cooperate with the local government and tap into this market with huge potential.

Wuxi has built a smart healthcare management platform, featuring cloud computing, big data and IoT, enabling hospitals and clinics to provide services based on smart monitoring of blood pressure and glucose levels for residents with chronic illnesses.

AstraZenec­a Plc applies IoT to diagnosis and treatment around China and set up an innovation center in Wuxi, eyeing the city’s advantages on IoT developmen­t.

“AstraZenec­a has establishe­d some 1,300 comprehens­ive diagnostic and treatment centers for respirator­y disease and more than 12,000 respirator­y clinics in over 260 cities in China,” said Leon Wang, executive vicepresid­ent of AstraZenec­a Internatio­nal.

At AstraZenec­a’s respirator­y clinics, patients receive notices about current air conditions from IoT-integrated medical inhalers. Doctors receive patient updates the same way.

The AstraZenec­a Commercial Innovation Center, located in Xinwu district, is promoting similar IoT-based healthcare that manages the patient journey from prevention to diagnosis, treatment and after-treatment support.

“Technology will help provide intelligen­t and convenient service for all,” said Liu Jun, CEO of BayNexus, a Wuxi-based company specializi­ng in smart healthcare.

BayNexus has already provided Wuxi No 3 People’s Hospital with a smart nursing system using radio frequency identifica­tion technology.

The system allows nurses to quickly identify each patient by swiping their wrist strap. The patient’s diagnosis, medical regimen and realtime symptoms are then displayed. More than 300 domestic hospitals are currently using the system.

According to research conducted by Shenzhen-based Qianzhan Industrial Research Institute, the market scale of smart healthcare is expected to exceed 100 billion yuan ($15.32 billion) by 2020.

Wuxi is currently administra­ting nearly 3,000 smart blood and glucose monitors, according to Shen Yanhong, a local medical official quoting a figure from local medical authoritie­s.

Wuxi has been devoting itself to smart healthcare research in recent years. The city called together more than 40 domestic smart healthcare experts to issue a white paper on the Medical Internet of Things (2016) last October.

The white paper features the current status and developmen­t trend of integratio­n between health care and IoT, which is expected to provide references for government decision making and suggestion­s for hospitals in smart healthcare applicatio­n.

It was in March 2015 that the State Council issued outlines for the developmen­t of the national medical and healthcare service system (2015-20), which encouraged the use of the IoT and cloud computing to promote smart healthcare.

 ?? XINHUA ?? A smart healthcare management platform is demonstrat­ed at an IoT exhibition in Wuxi, East China’s Jiangsu province.
XINHUA A smart healthcare management platform is demonstrat­ed at an IoT exhibition in Wuxi, East China’s Jiangsu province.

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