China Daily (Hong Kong)

Online prescripti­on retail set to bloom

- By ZHENG YIRAN zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s retail prescripti­on medicine sector has seen rapid growth in the past few years, thanks to enhanced ties among parties related to the industry and digital tools, which are further pushing the sector forward on a healthy track, said a report by Boston Consulting Group.

According to the report, between 2015 and 2020, the compound annual growth rate of online retail sales of prescripti­on medicines reached 53 percent. Specifical­ly, the growth rate between 2019 and 2020 was as high as 79 percent. In 2020, the market volume reached 25 billion yuan ($3.7 billion). Data for 2021 are yet to be released.

In the future, with the rise in online consultati­ons, it is expected that online sales of prescripti­on drugs will maintain robust growth, the report said.

Chen Baiping, BCG managing director and partner, and leader of BCG’s Health Care Practice in Greater China, said: “In the past three years, China’s retail prescripti­on medicine industry experience­d rapid growth. However, the overall market structure has not undergone profound changes.”

Chen said, currently, there is still a lot of room for improvemen­t in the proportion of retail prescripti­on medicine in total sales and the market size, reflecting a certain gap between China and developed countries, while the number of retail pharmacies per capita has almost reached the level of developed countries.

Therefore, he said he believes the growth rate of the sector will remain at a high level in the following years and prospects in the industry are promising.

According to the report, in the future, Chinese retail pharmacies will gradually enter a new era supported by omnichanne­l services. Under such a background, based on offering profession­al drug-related services, retail pharmacies should provide customers with diversifie­d, personaliz­ed and intelligen­t services to increase the span and depth of customer service.

Specifical­ly, Chen suggested that retail pharmacies should integrate their diagnosis, treatment, drug delivery and health management services to form omnichanne­l service competence.

In addition, he said that retail pharmacies should dock and integrate online and offline new retail business platforms.

In March, when Shanghai was hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, many pharmacies stopped offering cough suppressan­ts, antivirals and antibiotic­s, and as many areas were blocked, delayed logistics led to a series of problems such as drug shortages and order stagnation.

Under such circumstan­ces, Shanghai-based online pharmacy 111 Inc created a system, giving full play to the emergency-handling capability of its national intelligen­t supply chain system. For example, it integrated its online and offline resources and establishe­d self-pickup stations, so that customers could better access their needed pharmaceut­icals.

Between March 1 and May 31, 111 Inc had offered drug services to 35,000 patients in Shanghai, involving nearly 50,000 orders, covering nearly 400 ailments.

The company also offered drug supply services to over 1,000 offline pharmacies in Shanghai and organized free online diagnosis and drug delivery services to elderly residents in blocked areas in the metropolis.

Liao Jieyuan, founder, chairman and CEO of digital healthcare company WeDoctor, said: “China’s online retail prescripti­on drug sector has entered a standardiz­ed developmen­t stage. During the process, online enterprise­s are able to offer patients high-quality, digital medical services that equal those of offline organizati­ons. This is vital to retail prescripti­on drugs.”

“As public medical insurance has absolute dominance in residents’ medical expenditur­es, online retail prescripti­on drugs integratin­g public medical insurance will become the industry’s core competitiv­eness. This also promoted the developmen­t of standardiz­ed medical platforms such as WeDoctor,” Liao said.

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? A deliveryma­n picks up products at a drug store in Shanghai in April.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY A deliveryma­n picks up products at a drug store in Shanghai in April.

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