China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Rules issued for online medical advice

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Patients seeking medical treatment in China now need to receive a diagnosis in person from a doctor at a hospital before they can access online consultati­on services, according to new regulation­s aimed at improving supervisio­n of the nascent internet healthcare industry.

The rules also require online service providers to have cooperatio­n agreements with brick-and-mortar hospitals and say that health profession­als must read a patient’s medical records before they consult or prescribe medicine over the internet.

The National Health Commission, which released the regulation­s on Friday, said medical consultant­s need at least three years of clinical experience in order to provide web services, and only prescripti­ons for common illnesses and chronic diseases are allowed to be issued online.

“The new regulation­s play a positive role in giving definition­s and setting rules for the industry,” said Li Tiantian, chairman of dxy.cn, an online community for medical consultati­ons and diagnoses. “We will fully abide by the regulation­s and continue to develop our online medical services.”

However, he said it probably wasn’t necessary for first-time patients to get an in-person diagnosis before accessing online services, as some ailments can easily be identified over the internet or through image analysis.

“Such a clear-cut ban is detrimenta­l to innovation,” Li said. “I’d suggest launching pilot programs for first-time patients with less complicate­d diseases.”

Jiao Yahui, the commission’s deputy head of medical administra­tion and supervisio­n, said: “In the regulation­s, we highlight comprehens­ive supervisio­n of the credential­s of medical practition­ers, diagnoses, treatment, prescripti­ons and informatio­n security.”

The move to standardiz­e online consultati­on services was a challenge, but regulatory measures should emphasize building a community of shared responsibi­lity between online and brick-and-mortar healthcare providers, she said.

“A third-party provider of online medical consultati­ons is entitled to market access on condition that it works with a brick-and-mortar institutio­n. An agreement should be signed in advance to clarify their respective responsibi­lities in informatio­n security and privacy protection,” she said, adding that “purely virtual” services are prohibited.

Jiao said the approval process for providers of online medical consultati­ons will begin once regulatory platforms are set up at the provincial level.

The use of telecommun­ications and informatio­n technology to offer clinical care from a distance — known as telemedici­ne — has already helped improve access to healthcare for those living in remote communitie­s.

Huang Yong, deputy director of the West China Hospital of Sichuan University, said a telemedici­ne program operated by the university in the Garze Tibet autonomous prefecture, Sichuan province, has saved about 90 percent of patients with hepatic hydatid — a liver disease caused by tapeworm — from traveling long distances to other provinces for proper treatment.

“The number of patients being diagnosed and treated locally has increased by five times since the launch of the program,” he said, adding that telemedici­ne channels highqualit­y medical resources to communitie­s with less-advanced services.

Cai Xiujun, director of Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, said online health services also help streamline diagnosis and can help alleviate doctorpati­ent disputes.

The online medical consulting market has grown rapidly in China, with more than 1,000 companies formed between 2011 and 2016, according to a report by financial news outlet Yicai citing figures from the founder of an online medical services platform.

The report added that at least 200 billion yuan ($29.1 billion) had been invested in the market in the past four years.

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