China Daily

Medical hot spot found on Silk Road

Telemedici­ne, TCM, local Uygur treatments bring health consumers from neighborin­g countries

- By CHEN YINGQUN in Urumqi chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Good medical treatment and advanced telemedici­ne services are making Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region an attractive destinatio­n for patients from Central Asian countries, health officials said.

Xinjiang, which borders eight countries and is also an important spot on the ancient Silk Road routes, has been strengthen­ing cooperatio­n in the medical sector with neighborin­g countries for the past few years, said Peng Yong, deputy Party chief of the Health and Family Planning Commission of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

He said five key hospitals in Xinjiang now serve overseas patients, offering 500 hospital beds. In 2016, they treated more than 7,000 patients from other countries.

“Xinjiang is building itself into a medical center that could also cover Central Asian countries. Staff at these hospitals can speak languages such as Russia and Kazakh,” he said.

“Moreover, Xinjiang has built telemedici­ne platforms that could connect with hospitals that are overseas or in other parts of China, so that they could treat patients remotely.”

At present, Xinjiang’s telemedici­ne platform has connected with 11 key Chinese hospitals, 17 hospitals in Kyrgyzstan, two hospitals in Georgia and five hospitals in Kazakhstan.

“We are working on including 15 hospitals in Tajikistan in our platforms,” Peng said.

Wen Hao, director of the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University, said that in the past five years, the hospital has treated more than 10,000 overseas patients from neighborin­g countries.

For overseas patients, the hospital would also provide one-stop medical service to help them have better experience­s during the entire treatment period. They have built mechanisms for cooperatio­n and knowledge or data exchanges with more than 50 hospitals in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Apart from good mainstream medical treatment and services, Uygur local medicine and traditiona­l Chinese medicineor TC Mare also attracting overseas patients.

Yussup Matinur, director of the Hospital of Xinjiang Traditiona­l Uygur Medicine, said that they have treated more than 1,000 overseas patients in 2016, mostly in the department­s of dermatolog­y, orthopedic­s and gynecology.

The June-August period represents the peak season for patients, when hotels surroundin­g the hospital get fully booked.

“About 98 percent of our doctors are of ethnic groups, and can understand languages such as Uygur, Kazakh and Uzbek, and communicat­e with patients from Central Asian countries easily,” Matinur said.

“Moreover, about 90 percent of the medicines we use are Uygur medicine, which have special ways of treatment and are well trusted by people from Central Asia. With the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative, I think our cooperatio­n with overseas hospitals will be strengthen­ed.”

In Alma-Ata of Kazakhstan, TCM treatments like acupunctur­e and massages are very popular among locals.

Li Fengsen, deputy director of the Hospital of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, said that to help locals get better treatment, the hospital opened a subsidiary specializi­ng in rehabilita­tion projects such as acupunctur­e and massage. The hospital space spans about 3,000 square meters.

Wen said with the developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative, more people from Central Asia are embarking on medical tours to Xinjiang. So, in future, the region will develop more healthcare services for such visitors, especially those offering acupunctur­e and massage.

 ?? CAI YANG / XINHUA ?? A man (second from left) from Kazakstan and his wife (left) talk with Chinese doctors and nurses after an operation. Xinjiang is building itself into a medical center that could serve people from Central Asian countries.
CAI YANG / XINHUA A man (second from left) from Kazakstan and his wife (left) talk with Chinese doctors and nurses after an operation. Xinjiang is building itself into a medical center that could serve people from Central Asian countries.

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