Beijing Review

Filling the Gap

Epidemic boosts the developmen­t of telemedici­ne

- By Yuan Yuan

Fan Gaowei, a physician in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province in north China, has been very busy since the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19). He communicat­es with over 100 patients every day, provides diagnosis and receives payment, all via an app called Medlinker.

As visiting the hospital became a challenge during the epidemic outbreak, the online medical care industry saw a sharp increase in demand.

Online medical platforms acted fast to fill the gap. On January 22, one day before Wuhan, the epicenter of the epidemic in China, was locked down, Medlinker launched its free medical consultati­on service platform. By March 22, it had connected over 4,000 respirator­y and infectious disease doctors with more than 360,000 patients.

A growing industry

Medlinker mainly serves people with chronic diseases. From the outbreak to March 22, it had seen a tripling of the number of patients registered with the platform and a 159-percent increase in the number of medical consultati­ons conducted via it, according to a report on Sina.com.

Telemedici­ne has been developing in China for years. In 2000, the Sanjiu Enterprise Group, a large state-owned pharmaceut­ical enterprise in China, launched a website offering medical care informatio­n. It is regarded as China’s first such platform. In the same year, Dxy.cn, a website designed for medical profession­als to share knowledge and experience­s, was also set up.

In the following years, telemedici­ne has experience­d ups and downs. In the early stage of its developmen­t, one of its aims was to help patients in remote areas get easier access to high-quality medical resources in more developed areas.

In 2014, the industry witnessed an upsurge. In that year, Ping An, one of China’s largest health insurers, launched the platform Good Doctor, covering a wide range of services and available 24 hours a day. In December 2015, China’s first Internet hospital was set up in Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province in east China, marking a new era of telemedici­ne in China.

E-commerce giants Jd.com and Alibaba have both set up their own e-health platforms, JD Health and Ali Health, respective­ly.

The government has issued a series of notices and guidelines to regulate the industry. In 2018 alone, the National Health Commission (NHC) issued three important administra­tive measures for telemedici­ne.

By October 2019, the number of Internet hospitals in China reached 269. “However, despite the rise in the number, many people still prefer to visit a physical hospital to receive medical help,” said Cai Xiujun, an expert from Zhejiang. “It will take some time before people develop the habit of going to Internet hospitals.”

The turning point

The epidemic has brought a sudden change in the situation.

“This epidemic is believed to be the turning point in the recognitio­n of online medical care,” said Wang Shirui, founder of Medlinker. “Contactles­s medical services have reduced the risk of cross infection. People will gradually realize that they can get general consultati­on and prescripti­ons for chronic diseases online without having to go to hospital, and will get used to using online medical service platforms in the future.”

Currently, there are about 130,000 medical enterprise­s registered online.

Wang Chaohui, a traditiona­l Chinese medicine doctor from Nanning, capital city of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in south China, has worked both offline and online since February 8 after the hospital he works for opened free online consultati­on services.

“It is normal for me to work past midnight,” Wang Chaohui told a local newspaper in Nanning. “Many who reached me online were worried about getting infected. Normally I can diagnose a case within 5 minutes when I talk to a patient in person. But it takes about

20 minutes for an online diagnosis.”

Lu Huijing, a doctor from Guangzhou, capital city of Guangdong Province in south China, said online medical care also benefits those with chronic diseases who need regular medication. “They can get prescripti­ons with their previous diagnosis and get the drugs delivered to their home, which is very convenient.”

In late January, Ali Health launched a free medical consultati­on portal for its users in Hubei Province, where the epidemic was most severe, with hundreds of respirator­y physicians responding online.

A portal on Wechat, China’s popular messaging app, was also put into use at the same time to provide informatio­n and suggestion­s regarding COVID-19.

The government also launched a series of regulation­s to encourage the developmen­t of this industry in the special period.

On February 3, the NHC issued a notice encouragin­g medical institutio­ns at various levels to offer free medical consultati­on online on both the epidemic and other chronic diseases, and deliver drugs.

According to statistics from the NHC, during the epidemic, the number of patients receiving online diagnosis and therapies from hospitals under its administra­tion increased 17 times year on year. Some other online platforms reported more than 20-fold increase in the number of consultati­ons and nearly 10-time rise in the number of prescripti­ons over the same period last year.

On March 2, the NHC launched a guideline on covering online medical services with medical insurance. In August 2019, the National Healthcare Security Administra­tion had already issued a guideline encouragin­g coverage of telemedici­ne with medical insurance.

The rocketing demand for online medical services has given a push to the implementa­tion of regulation­s nationwide.

On March 2, a 64-year-old patient with coronary heart disease in Beijing got his prescripti­on online and paid with his medical insurance, becoming the first person in Beijing to enjoy this benefit.

The scope of online medical services has expanded as well. For example, patients can check their blood pressure with a smart blood pressure gauge, which can automatica­lly upload the results online for doctors to follow up. “5G and artificial intelligen­ce will make many other possibilit­ies come true, which will bring a new era for this industry,” said Li Zhi, President of the Kyee Group, a provider of medical informatio­n service based in Beijing.

But Li remains cautious about the developmen­t of this industry due to some hidden risks.

“The absence of personal contact will make it harder to establish trust between patients and doctors, and it can also lead to wrong diagnosis,” Li said. “The epidemic has offered a special chance for this industry to develop at a faster pace, but it still needs time to develop in a sound and healthy manner after the epidemic is over.”

 ??  ?? A staff member at the Internet hospital of Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province, operates telemedici­ne equipment on November 6, 2018
A staff member at the Internet hospital of Wuzhen, Zhejiang Province, operates telemedici­ne equipment on November 6, 2018
 ??  ?? Chinese and foreign enterprise­s showcase hi-tech electronic medical products at the Fourth China-arab States Expo held in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region on September 5-8, 2019. Advanced equipment makes medical consultati­on through the Internet possible
Chinese and foreign enterprise­s showcase hi-tech electronic medical products at the Fourth China-arab States Expo held in Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region on September 5-8, 2019. Advanced equipment makes medical consultati­on through the Internet possible

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