China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Online medical firms helping ease burden on offline clinics

- By ZHENG YIRAN in Beijing and YANG JUN in Guiyang Contact the writers at zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

Internet-based medical enterprise­s in China have come up with several new services like free online consultati­ons and livestream­ing by renowned profession­als to address health queries and help the country in its fight against the novel coronaviru­s epidemic.

Internet medical service platforms like Ali Health, Ping An Good Doctor and Dingdang Kuaiyi have joined hands to offer these services, which are already gaining considerab­le traction among the general public, experts said. According to Ali Health, during the first 24 hours after its mini consultati­on service was launched online, it attracted nearly 400,000 visits.

Chen Qiaoshan, a healthcare analyst at Beijing-based market consultanc­y Analysys, said: “The fight against the novel coronaviru­s outbreak has brought new growth points for the internet-based medical sector. Since the epidemic entered a high incidence period during the Lunar New Year, most of the people are now staying at home to avoid cross contaminat­ion. Online consultati­ons are now the top choice for the public.”

She said that most of the internet medical companies are capable of meeting the current requiremen­ts by making full use of their unique advantages in rapid responses to online consultati­on, remote isolation, and diversion before consultati­on.

Data from app tracker Analysys Qianfan show that during the Lunar New Year holiday, the daily active users for single online medical consultati­on apps peaked at 6.71 million, with the biggest increase being 1.6 million, or a 31.28-percent growth on a yearly basis.

More than 10 internet-based healthcare enterprise­s, such as WeDoctor, haodf.com and dxy.com, have also joined efforts to launch a free online consultati­on platform in Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak.

According to WeDoctor, by Wednesday noon, its free consultati­on platform accumulate­d over 86.89 million visits. A total of 18,776 physicians have offered medical consultati­on services to 986,100 visitors.

“Free consultati­on services offer great opportunit­ies for online medical firms to attract new customers. In addition, due to the decrease in entertainm­ent activities and continuous media publicity, internet-based medical apps have managed to maintain high user stickiness,” Chen said.

The medical e-commerce sector has also seen a boom. Due to shortage of products like facial masks, surgical alcohol and preventive medicines, consumers are turning to medical e-commerce platforms.

According to Analysys Qianfan, from Jan 24 to Jan 30, the daily active user peak in the sector reached 1.48 million, and the highest daily compound growth rate of daily average users during the period was 8.27 percent.

Pang Chenglin, general manager and executive director of Guizhoubas­ed 39hospital.com, said that “through online consultati­ons, the public have become increasing­ly aware of the benefits of internet healthcare, and their trust accumulate­d.”

“Building an online doctor-patient relationsh­ip based on trust is fundamenta­l to the developmen­t of the sector,” Chen from Analysys said.

“Besides, the fight against the virus has prompted us to boost our technology and research and developmen­t efforts. During the Lunar New Year holiday, which was a high incidence stage, we had been working day and night to optimize our products, so that more people could be able to consult online,” Pang said.

On Jan 26, Guizhou-based internet medical company Longmaster — the parent company of 39hospital.com — and Ping An Insurance (Group) Co Ltd launched a 24-hour online platform to offer video and image consultati­on services for free. By Tuesday, the platform had accumulate­d more than 500 volunteer respirator­y physicians.

On Monday, the National Health Commission issued a guideline on the epidemic prevention and control which said that medical institutio­ns should take advantage of internet-based healthcare to release the pressure on offline clinics. Internet-based hospitals are encouraged to offer medical services and drug delivery services to lower infection possibilit­y, it said.

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