China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Building healthcare in China

Roberta Lipson, CEO of United Family Healthcare, has developed a network of hospitals and clinics in major Chinese cities

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in a personal basis with local people.”

“Wow! So much has changed over the years,” she says.

In 1982, she and another American woman founded Chindex. They initially imported many kinds of equipment, including big machines for ports and mines. But they soon specialize­d in medical equipment.

“China was closed for the whole 10 years of the ‘cultural revolution’ (1966-76) and the hospitals when we got here had nothing in terms of hardware. We saw that opportunit­y and I think we helped to change the way healthcare was delivered at that time. Before, the doctors had their stethoscop­e and their two hands to rely on. We brought the first ultrasound, the first MRI, the first patient monitors, the first electrosur­gical generators, the first ultrasound scalpels. Later, the first surgical robot. So many technologi­es we brought for the first time really changed the tools that doctors have to do their business with,” she says.

However, even with the new technologi­es, Chinese and foreigners alike were unhappy with healthcare in the early 1990s.

“We had the idea we could build a small hospital in Beijing that could cater to the needs of the expat community. At the same time, we believed it could be a demonstrat­ion site for many tweaks that we thought could be useful in China,” Lipson recalls.

When she first pushed this idea, there was skepticism from Chinese healthcare authoritie­s as well as US investors. “It was met with a certain amount of disbelief that an American for-profit company would be interested in building a hospital in a socialist country.”

“In 1994, after Deng Xiaoping’s ‘southern tour’, it became clear that attracting foreign investment was a priority for China.” So, arguing that Western healthcare was important to attract foreign workers and investors, she persuaded the government to give the green light for the hospital in Beijing.

Wall Street was skeptical. “China was still very much a place of mystery for the finance community in the US. So it wasn’t so easy to convince them of this plan to build healthcare in a socialist country. We did end up having an IPO on NASDAQ in 1994,” she says.

In 2014, Lipson concluded that the stock market did not account for the long-term value of the company, so United Family Healthcare was taken private and outside shares were bought by management and private equity investors TPG and Fosun.

UFH started small. At first, it occupied just two floors of a building, with an internatio­nal school occupying the upper floors. Most of the first clients were expats.

But that changed. Today, 80 percent of the patients at UFH are Chinese. “We didn’t know if Chinese people would eventually want to be our clients or not. Some Chinese people started coming. At the beginning they were a smattering of returnees who had experience­d foreign healthcare and maybe came back to China with insurance. Then the sports stars and movie stars. One of their big motivators was privacy. On the other hand, when they came to have babies with us, they were always excited to talk about their experience with the media afterward. As a result, the things that were different about UFH got talked about more and more in the press,” Lipson says.

Lipson, who has devoted her entire profession­al life to improving healthcare in China, says that she is a big fan of the Healthy China 2030 blueprint laid out by President Xi Jinping in October 2016.

“China has made a lot of investment in the top-tier hospitals in urban centers. They have done a lot on medical research. The problem is that there are still great disparitie­s,” she says.

“Healthcare reform in any country is very difficult. It is very complex. There are a lot of vested interests and it is very hard to change. But China has been trying really hard and is finally making some really big progress. Over the last 10 years, they have gone from not many people being covered by social health insurance to the 98 percent covered now. That is huge progress.”

“Healthy China 2030 focuses on grassroots issues. It emphasizes sharing responsibi­lities with individual­s for their own health. At the same time, it will develop grassroots primary care doctors to keep people healthy through various programs — public health education, vaccinatio­ns, getting people active, encouragin­g healthy lifestyles and participat­ion in sports and individual fitness,” she adds.

“It is extremely important that Healthy China 2030 focuses on the training of primary care physicians. Medical education has been overspecia­lized and there are not enough trained primary care physicians. This has been hard to overcome, but the government recognizes how important it is to improve the primary care that is available at the grassroots level. The government is really working hard to implement a tiered system where people can get more care at the primary level,” she says.

Lipson says she will have her hands full in the next year guiding the building of four hospitals, but, after that, her goal is to build a new world-class medical school.

Although the Chinese economy is much more developed than when she first arrived, Lipson believes there are still big opportunit­ies for foreigners as well as Chinese in China.

“Sometimes young people ask me if I think there are opportunit­ies for entreprene­urs in China today. I think there are. China continues to be developing and changing at such a rapid rate. Maybe there is not an opportunit­y to start a medical equipment distributi­on business — other people have already done that. But because of the rate at which technology is changing and the rate at which Chinese consumer needs are changing and the rate at which the government openness is changing, I think there are still huge opportunit­ies. It is just a matter of finding them.”

says China has been trying really hard and is finally making some really big progress in the medical reform.

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