New Straits Times

A.I. ‘CURING’ DOCTOR SHORTAGE

Tech firms look to artificial intelligen­ce to ease China’s healthcare issue

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QU Jianguo, 64, had a futuristic medical visit here as he put his wrist through an automated pulse-taking machine and received the result within two minutes on a mobile phone — without a doctor present.

The small device, which has a half-open clasp that records the heartbeat, is one of the technologi­es developed by hi-tech firms aiming to help China offset its shortage of physicians by combining big data and artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

The machine, made by Ping An Good Doctor, was shown off at the 2018 World AI Expo here at a time when policymake­rs are making a major push to turn the country into a global tech leader.

“I came here to see how Chinese-style medical treatment could be done without a doctor. That would be really convenient,” said Qu, a retired IT worker attending the expo.

China had less than 12 million health workers last year in a population of almost 1.4 billion, according to the National Health Commission.

Ping An Good Doctor, which recently listed in Hong Kong, has one of China’s largest online healthcare platforms with 228 million registered patients.

Bi Ge, a company spokesman, said the company received 500,000 online consultati­on requests daily.

The pulse-taking machine is part of Ping An Good Doctor’s AI-assisted medical consultati­on system, which allows patients to do quick checks and get prescripti­ons without having to go to the hospital or pharmacy.

Ping An’s services include a mobile app in which patients enter their personal data, medical history and describe their symptoms to an AI-assisted “receptioni­st” that transfers the informatio­n to a real-life doctor for a diagnosis.

“It can definitely ease China’s doctor shortage problem... With the assistance of AI, it can relieve doctors from doing mundane, simple, and repetitive work,” said Liu Kang, a former doctor at Peking Union Medical College Hospital.

“But China’s overall AI developmen­t in medical fields is still at the catching-up phase”

US and European companies, startups and researcher­s have also been harnessing AI to apply the technology to various health care needs.

Chinese companies have been learning from other countries to develop and implement AI-assisted care such as medical imaging diagnosis, robot surgical systems, and drug research and developmen­t.

Good doctors in China are highly sought-after, but the supply is low and not equally distribute­d.

Less than 10 per cent of China’s hospitals are considered highlevel facilities, but they treat half of the country’s patients, according to a State Informatio­n Centre report last year.

Big data and AI-assisted services and remote communicat­ion offered by companies such as Ping An allow patients from second- and third-tier cities to access profession­al advice from qualified doctors based in big cities.

“We are imitating and duplicatin­g the skills of qualified doctors, the ones from tertiary-level (highest-level) hospitals, and spread it to smaller cities and local counties,” said Fang Qu, chief technology officer of Proxima, a healthcare technology company focusing on AI-assisted medical imaging diagnosis.

Traditiona­l Chinese methods of medical assessment — including pulse taking, which Qu experience­d at the AI expo — are popular among the elderly, although some might prefer a more human touch.

“It doesn’t feel the same as a doctor yet. I also don’t understand what the result means,” said Qu.

“I’d still need a doctor.”

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