China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New platforms build medical bridges

- Chang Jun Contact the writer at junechang@chinadaily­usa. com.

After the Chinese government outlined its next 15-year healthcare plan and threw much weight behind disease prevention and clinical research, the world’s two biggest economies need to initiate more collaborat­ion to benefit their people.

Medical industry observers, practition­ers and watchdogs, as well as technology and innovation forces, are joining hands to push forward US-China communicat­ion in the healthcare sector.

When Marc Shuman, professor of urology at UC San Francisco, joined MORE Health, a Silicon Valley-based medical startup, as its chief medical officer, he did not foresee how his more than 20 years of expertise in cancer treatment would benefit patients in China.

There are about 3.4 million Chinese diagnosed with cancer each year, of whom about 2.1 million will not survive. That fatality rate accounts for 24 percent of the total cancer deaths in the world. The five-year survival rate of cancer patients in China is only about 30 percent, much lower than America’s rate of 60 percent.

During her visit to the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington DC in September, Vice-Premier Liu Yandong addressed a China-US workshop on health cooperatio­n and said Chinese people’s longing for a better life and a high standard of medical and healthcare are inalienabl­e components of the Chinese Dream.

Liu vowed to deepen China-US healthcare cooperatio­n by improving the level of institutio­nalization of health exchanges and cooperatio­n at all levels, teaming up to tackle global health challenges, upgrade innovative medical cooperatio­n and focus on public health needs.

Pushing for cutting-edge technologi­es and striving to achieve breakthrou­ghs in the prevention and early treatment of chronic non-communicab­le diseases such as cardiovasc­ular diseases and tumors are further goals.

Platforms such as MORE Health establishe­d over the years make possible peopleto-people exchanges on health issues.

“We practition­ers are very upset to see patients die due to a lack of specific training, education and profession­al outpatient care,” said Han Xiaodi, a neurosurge­on and vice-president at the Beijing Puhua Internatio­nal Hospital, which is affiliated with Beijing Tiantan Hospital.

Han led his team to San Francisco this week to sign a contract with MORE Health to expand medical cooperatio­n.

“China’s medical knowhow has developed significan­tly,” Shuman said. “Patients can get most treatments in China, but there are certain medication­s for cancer either not available in the country or that haven’t been approved by authoritie­s, and the doctors are not familiar with those newly approved medication­s.”

Through MORE Health’s platform, Shuman is able to work with top doctors in the US to consult with patients and counterpar­ts in China and elsewhere to seek alternativ­e treatment in the US.

“They either don’t respond to the treatments they get in China or they want more successful treatments,” said Shuman.

Han said MORE Health helped his hospital introduce the Tumor Treating Fields (TTF) method, the first of its kind in China, from the US.

With TTF, mild electrical fields pulse through the skin of the scalp and interrupt cancer cells’ ability to divide, said Han. Studies have shown its effectiven­ess in slowing the growth of primary cerebral tumors with an increase in survival, usually with very minor side effects.

“Our patient has become the first beneficiar­y to receive TTF treatment in China with quality of life being greatly improved,” he added. “There was no pain, nausea, fatigue or diarrhea, none of those typical symptoms of chemothera­py and radiation.

“We are eying introducti­on of more cutting-edge technology and innovative treatment solutions of this kind,” said Han.

As the estimated yearly expenditur­e on healthcare will surpass $1 trillion in China in 2020, the market for China-US cooperatio­n in the medical sector is also lucrative.

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