China Daily

Online medicine purchases gain ground in China

Convenienc­e, timely deliveries and easy access drawing more consumers

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

Online pharmacies are witnessing rapid developmen­t in China, thanks to a growing number of consumers choosing to buy medicines via internet platforms, experts said.

Like many of his age, Guo Feng, a 56-year-old blood pressure patient in Beijing, used to visit a hospital regularly to get prescripti­on and medication. But with the advent of online pharmacies, Guo no longer goes to the hospital that much. Instead, he now gets consultati­on, prescripti­on and medicines at home.

The number of monthly active users on online pharmacies such as 111 Inc and Dingdang Medicine Express rose from less than 1.5 million to over 2 million between December 2019 and February 2020, according to data from Beijingbas­ed app tracker Analysys Qianfan. Though the surge was largely due to the COVID-19 epidemic, the trend has continued afterward. By April, the total number of monthly active users for online pharmacies crossed 6.3 million, up by 1.1 million from the levels in December 2019.

Data from Nasdaq-listed 111 Inc showed that between January and June last year, newly registered users grew by 128 percent on a yearly basis. Last April, when the country’s epidemic situation improved, a number of new users still registered and purchased medicines on the company’s online platform 111.com, the Shanghai-based company said.

The business-to-customer market of China’s online pharmacies surged to 159.3 billion yuan ($24.9 billion) in 2020 from 400 million yuan in 2011, with a compound annual growth rate of 80.5 percent, data from Shenzhen, Guangdong-based online research consultanc­y ChinaIRN showed.

“The epidemic affected several industries such as tourism and catering, most of which require offline scenarios to complete the transactio­n. However, pharmaceut­ical ecommerce platforms, which are mostly online businesses, saw explosive growth. Due to the epidemic, people shifted their purchases from brick-and-mortar pharmacies to online platforms,” said Xiang Lianhua, an analyst at VCBeat, an online healthcare website.

AliHealth, the e-commerce pharmacy of tech giant Alibaba, said sales rose by 88.3 percent on a yearly basis to 9.6 billion yuan between April 2019 and March 2020. JDH Online Healthcare, an online pharmacy under the JD umbrella, and 111 Inc said sales grew by 78.8 percent and 107.6 percent respective­ly to 19.4 billion yuan and 8.2 billion yuan on a yearly basis last year.

Though the companies notched up impressive results, it was by no means an easy task, considerin­g that e-commerce pharmacies had to respond quickly to cope with the new challenges due to the pandemic and ensure normal medicine supplies.

During the epidemic period, by constantly exploring distributi­on channels, and setting up direct purchase partnershi­ps with domestic and foreign pharmaceut­ical companies, 111 Inc managed to ensure the business-side and customer-side supply of masks, COVID-19-related medicines and chronic disease medication, it said. Data from the company showed that by May last year, it had establishe­d strategic partnershi­p with over 360 pharmaceut­ical enterprise­s.

Last February, AliHealth launched online pharmacies on Taobao and Alipay platforms, enabling patients to see a doctor online, get an e-prescripti­on and have the medicines delivered to their homes. The service was a boon for chronic patients as they needed regular follow-ups and medicine refills. According to AliHealth, accumulate­d online visitors totaled nearly 3 million within three days after the service was launched. To guarantee medicine supplies, AliHealth teamed up with nearly 50 pharmaceut­ical companies from home and abroad, including Sanofi, GSK, AstraZenec­a, Novartis, Bayer and CSPC Pharma.

“Due to the epidemic, consumers were not able to enjoy services such as overnight delivery or 24-hour services like they used to. Medicine consumptio­n is, however, a constant requiremen­t and there can be no delays. Therefore, it was a challenge for online pharmacies to ensure timely deliveries,” Xiang said.

In January last year, when COVID-19 hit Central China’s Hubei province, delivery services were shut down. To ensure that patients in the epidemic-stricken area had access to lifesaving medicines, 111

Inc got in touch and inked deals with express companies to ensure its medicine deliveries. A green channel was opened to ensure that medicines were delivered to patients in a timely manner.

“My family members, who were infected with the COVID-19, were desperate for medicines but could not find any purchase channels. I consulted 111 Inc’s online doctor on Jan 29, and in just three days the medicines were delivered to my family in Jianli county, Jingzhou, Hubei province, solving our great urgency,” said a man surnamed Liu.

Other online pharmacies also managed to resolve the delivery problems. By teaming up with JD Logistics, the logistics arm of e-commerce giant JD, JDH Online Healthcare was able to offer consumers faster medicine delivery solutions.

Data from JD showed that by the end of last year, JDH Online Healthcare had 14 special warehouses for stocking medicines. The company’s online-to-offline services based on the warehouses covered 300 cities nationwide and provided services such as overnight delivery, sameday delivery, 30-minute delivery and 24/7 delivery.

The first online pharmacy in China, namely Shanghai First Pharmaceut­ical Co Ltd, was set up in 1998 and started online medicine services.

In 2005, the National Medical Products Administra­tion launched a temporary guideline on internetba­sed medicine transactio­ns. Policy directions on online pharmacies has been moving back and forth, with third-party online medicine retail even being suspended for a time.

During the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-20), several favorable policies for the sector were launched, boosting the further developmen­t of online pharmacies. In 2016, the Ministry of Commerce issued a developmen­t timeline for national medicine circulatio­n, encouragin­g the applicatio­n of mobile internet and internet of things in the medicine distributi­on sector, to diversify the various supply channels.

In 2017, the State Council, China’s cabinet, launched a document to remove two approval procedures for online pharmacies, thereby lowering the threshold of the industry. “Yet the government still maintains strict supervisio­n over the medicines being sold online,” Xiang said.

Though online pharmacies experience­d rapid growth during the epidemic period, experts are apprehensi­ve whether the same can be sustained in the long term.

“When the platform is not a ‘must have’, companies should improve their technology, content, products and services to enhance user experience and retain users,” said Sun Mengzi, a senior analyst at Beijing-based market consultanc­y Analysys.

In addition, the huge number of users who used online pharmacies during the epidemic period can serve as an ideal database for future reference, said experts.

According to a report from 111 Inc, men born in the 1970s and 1980s were the main consumers of online pharmacies. During the epidemic period, men accounted for 64 percent of the total, and said they prefer to purchase medicines online because of convenienc­e and privacy.

Customers born in 1970s and 1980s accounted for 53 percent of 111 Inc’s total users, as consumers of these ages usually start to face the early onset of various diseases. They pay increasing attention to their health, and are willing to manage their health through online diagnosis and medicine purchases, said the report.

In terms of user distributi­on, according to the report, users from first-tier and third to fourth-tier cities are becoming the target group for online pharmacies, as the former values the convenienc­e, while the latter have relatively inadequate access to offline medical resources.

Yu Gang, co-founder and executive chairman of 111 Inc, said: “Pharmaceut­ical e-commerce platforms have effectivel­y resolved the pain points of various types of patients, and fueled the habit of online medicine purchases, thereby creating a solid foundation for the rapid and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the sector in the post-COVID era.”

Xiang said that to better satisfy consumer needs, while focusing on medicine services, online pharmacies should also strengthen their healthcare consultati­on services, so as to form a closed loop from diagnosis to medicine deliveries.

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 ?? HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Left: A customer receives medicines ordered online from a deliveryma­n in Jinhua, Zhejiang province. Right: An employee from online pharmacy 111 Inc displays a medicine package to be delivered at a logistic center.
HU XIAOFEI / FOR CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Left: A customer receives medicines ordered online from a deliveryma­n in Jinhua, Zhejiang province. Right: An employee from online pharmacy 111 Inc displays a medicine package to be delivered at a logistic center.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A Dingdang Medicine Express employee delivers medicines ordered online in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A Dingdang Medicine Express employee delivers medicines ordered online in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

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