China Daily

Online healthcare needs more govt support

Facilities at the grassroots level must be better developed to serve patients

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

The online healthcare insurance system should be better developed to form a closed loop encompassi­ng online healthcare consultati­on all the way to payment methods to better serve patients, said national legislator­s.

“What is offered offline should also be offered online. Patients of common ailments and chronic diseases should be able to see a doctor online, and the service fee should be included in the national healthcare insurance fund,” said Sun Wei, a deputy of the 13th National People’s Congress and honorary director of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Shandong University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine, during an interview with Qilu Evening News.

Sun said that when COVID-19 broke out, the internet healthcare sector experience­d burgeoning developmen­t. However, practical problems still remain.

“The cost and reimbursem­ent policies of online hospitals should be consistent with those of brickand-mortar hospitals. Real-name registered online consultati­ons should be implemente­d. Meanwhile, online expense review systems and medical service supervisio­n mechanisms should be establishe­d to ensure the safety and security of the national healthcare insurance fund,” she added.

On Feb 23, 2020, when the novel coronaviru­s was spreading in Wuhan, Hubei province, the Wuhan Healthcare Security Administra­tion launched 18 measures to control the outbreak and ensure routine primary care.

One measure was to support the inclusion of online healthcare services into the public insurance system. Apart from Wuhan, over 10 cities also launched similar policies, thus allowing online healthcare services to unclog a major bottleneck seen amid the contagion.

On Nov 2, the National Healthcare Security Administra­tion issued a guideline promoting “internet plus” healthcare insurance payments while clarifying management scope, applicatio­n requiremen­ts and settlement targets of online medical insurance, thus indicating that the inclusion of internet healthcare into the public insurance system had entered a practical stage.

Zhang Xiaoxu, a research fellow at VCBeat, an online healthcare website, said: “Currently, the policies have been better implemente­d in first-tier cities such as Beijing and Shanghai as these cities have relatively ample public health insurance funds. However, online hospitals in second and third-tier cities, and medical institutio­ns at the grassroots level, still have a long way to go. After the two sessions, it is expected that more policies to boost the inclusion of internet healthcare into the public health insurance system will be carried out.”

Currently, even in megacities like Beijing, practical problems still exist.

Zhang Yang, a 28-year-old media profession­al, recently consulted a doctor online. She downloaded the mobile app developed by Beijing Hospital — a public 3A-grade facility — and registered with her social security identifica­tion number.

As Zhang had a sore throat, she was planning to see a respirator­y specialist. However, she found out that the online doctor of Beijing Hospital’s respirator­y department was only on call every Tuesday morning.

“The online doctor personnel resources were limited,” she said.

As Zhang registered using her social security ID, her online consultati­on fee was mostly covered by the public medical insurance. However, when she tried to purchase pharmaceut­icals online, she was told that online purchasing only supports out-of-pocket payments. To reimburse using public health insurance, she still needed to go to Beijing Hospital to conduct an offline payment.

“So far, public hospitals in Beijing don’t support online drug reimbursem­ent. To open the service, we have to wait for the notice issued by the Beijing Medical Insurance Bureau,” said Cao Suyan, chief physician of the general practice department at Beijing Hospital.

With vast developmen­t opportunit­ies, online healthcare platforms are also stepping up efforts. Ping An Healthcare and Technology Co Ltd, a Shanghai-based leading online healthcare services platform, had signed agreements for more than 120 internet hospital projects by the end of 2020. Among the projects, 50 are already up and running, with five being connected to online social health insurance payment systems.

Hangzhou, Zhejiang provinceba­sed digital health company WeDoctor now runs 28 internet hospitals, among which 17 have enabled online payment reimbursem­ent.

“A medical liability system that includes prevention, diagnosis, treatment, disease management and health maintenanc­e should be establishe­d. This is what we are dedicated to now,” said Liao Jieyuan, founder and CEO of WeDoctor.

The cost and reimbursem­ent policies of online hospitals should be consistent with those of brick-and-mortar hospitals.”

Sun Wei, honorary director of Second Affiliated Hospital, part of the Shandong University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine

 ?? ZHANG YUWEI / XINHUA ?? An employee explains the use of a function within a hospital app in Beijing on May 25.
ZHANG YUWEI / XINHUA An employee explains the use of a function within a hospital app in Beijing on May 25.

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