China Daily

Virtual healthcare helps save time, lives

- By ZHENG YIRAN

On a typical recent Tuesday afternoon, Wang Nan, a retired primary schoolteac­her living in Shaoxing, Zhejiang province, went to a community service station to undergo a regular physical examinatio­n.

With a smart eldercare solution launched in the community, the 62-year-old, who has been suffering from high blood pressure for years, no longer needs to visit hospitals to monitor his health.

“I can get thorough body exams in the community and the results, such as blood pressure data, are uploaded to the online smart health management system where my doctor can get access. Once a problem is spotted, I can get medical consultati­on services online without the need to wait in line at brick-and-mortar hospitals,” Wang said.

The smart health community solution was provided by Beijingbas­ed BOE Technology Group Co Ltd, an internet of things company providing intelligen­t interface products and profession­al services for informatio­n interactio­n and human health.

Specifical­ly, when the solution is applied in communitie­s, it offers a set of physical diagnostic equipment, such as sphygmoman­ometers, height and weight scales, Body Mass Index and bone density meters, and noninvasiv­e multiparam­eter detectors. User data is automatica­lly synchroniz­ed to BOE’s smart system where users can check results and consult a human or artificial intelligen­ce doctor if necessary.

In addition, BOE’s smart health community solution provides automated external defibrilla­tors to seniors living in communitie­s, offering timely cardiac emergency assistance.

Liu Jia’an, senior vice-president of BOE and also co-chief executive officer of the Smart Medicine and Engineerin­g Integratio­n Business of BOE, said: “With the integratio­n of healthcare and technology, together with the leapfrog developmen­t of 5G, AI, big data, IoT and life technologi­es, smart healthcare came into being.

“The rapid developmen­t of technology also promoted the effective docking and resource optimizati­on among individual­s, families, communitie­s and healthcare institutio­ns, offering strong support to the realizatio­n of life-cycle health management,” Li said.

To take advantage of high technology to improve the efficiency of first aid, BOE launched a smart firstaid solution.

During traditiona­l emergency calls, old people dialed emergency numbers, informed the operator of his/her exact location and waited for an ambulance.

In contrast, BOE’s smart first-aid solution, which is installed in smart home appliances, mobile apps and mobile mini programs, automatica­lly gets access to the caller’s location and health data. Through real-time video calls, emergency call operators are able to learn of on-site situations and guide the caller in self-aid until help arrives.

Furthermor­e, with such a solution, medical equipment onboard ambulances can monitor patient signs in real time and upload the data to a hospital so that it is able to gain access to the patient’s health condition in advance, thus saving precious time.

Wu Yushao, deputy head of the China National Committee on Aging, said that smart technologi­es solve problems in traditiona­l eldercare, including issues related to home care, travel, safety protection, health management and basic psychologi­cal care.

“Modern technologi­es such as IoT, big data and AI are promoting the ‘overtaking-on-a-corner’ process in China’s eldercare sector,” Wu said.

Liu from BOE said that in the future, the company plans to take advantage of biochips, IoT and AI technologi­es to further optimize its smart healthcare management ecology, bring about “family-community-hospital” service scenario linkage and data exchange, and provide customers with life-cycle medical services running from prevention, diagnosis and treatment to rehabilita­tion.

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