China Daily

Balancing growth mea c

New measures to bridge healthcare gaps between cities, villages

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn Zhu Xingxin contribute­d to this story.

Measures have been unveiled to bolster the nation’s telemedici­ne network to improve epidemic prevention measures at the grassroots and raise access to healthcare in less- developed areas.

A policy document, issued by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology and the National Health Commission on Nov 3, said the level of internet coverage at grassroots healthcare institutio­ns will be raised by expanding the scale of broadband services and 4G networks in remote and impoverish­ed areas.

The coverage of 5G networks will be expanded to more healthcare institutio­ns to offer better internet connectivi­ty. The blueprint is the central government’s latest move to promote telemedici­ne and bridge the urbanrural healthcare gap.

Last year, China’s telemedici­ne network saw 21.72 million patient visits, and more than 24,000 medical institutio­ns nationwide were connected to the network, according to the NHC.

“The document is a key step toward the establishm­ent of an ideal telemedici­ne system in China,” said Cui Yong, vice- president of the China- Japan Friendship Hospital in Beijing and chairman of an expert panel at the department of dermatolog­y at the National Telemedici­ne and Connected Health Center.

He noted that the disparity in healthcare between hospitals in first- and second- tier cities and those at the grassroots has seen people flowing to big cities, leaving small hospitals with fewer patients.

Cui added that the gap in the level of medical services between hospitals in different parts of the country could be reduced by telemedici­ne, which offers remote clinical services and exchanges between practition­ers.

One of the major challenges facing the telemedici­ne system is a lack of applicatio­n of new technologi­es, such as 5G and artificial intelligen­ce, with technologi­cal levels also varying between hospitals. Those factors are the driving forces behind the document, he said.

He highlighte­d the need for stronger guidance from the central government and the rolling out of more support policies to integrate telemedici­ne with the medical insurance system and cutting- edge technologi­es.

Meanwhile, as hospitals have developed a range of systems for telemedici­ne, it is important for authoritie­s to push forward the restructur­ing and unificatio­n of such systems to boost connectivi­ty between hospitals and improve efficiency, he said.

“A nationally unified telemedici­ne system, a key step toward making the system more efficient and diagnoses more accurate, will help raise the level of trust and acceptance among patients,” he added.

Cui gave the example of the ChinaJapan Friendship Hospital, which undertakes functions for the National Telemedici­ne and Connected Health Center. It provided long- distance diagnoses for severe COVID- 19 cases in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province, earlier this year and played a key role in patients’ treatment and recovery.

The document also pledged to fully utilize new- generation informatio­n technology to improve access to healthcare in poor areas and help impoverish­ed groups.

Diagnostic services

The government will extend telemedici­ne coverage to all poor counties, connect long- distance diagnostic services to villages equipped to handle them and offer individual­s and households access to online lessons about basic healthcare and home management of chronic disease, it added.

Wang Hang, founder and CEO of Haodf, one of China’s largest online healthcare companies, said telemedici­ne has made the services of highrankin­g clinicians much more accessible to rural residents and helped reduce their healthcare costs.

Local authoritie­s have employed Wang’s company to provide telemedici­ne services to residents in the country’s western areas, including the Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

He noted that internet access is still lacking in some rural areas and many residents do not own smartphone­s, while awareness of the help available through telemedici­ne systems is low. These are major obstacles to the promotion of telemedici­ne in remote areas.

“It is important to extend the reach of telemedici­ne so people in the rural areas can understand that the services are helpful. Only in this way can we gain more people’s trust and promote the developmen­t of such services at the grassroots level,” Wang said.

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SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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