Global Times

China, BRI countries eye joint projects in internet-powered healthcare sector

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A China-Benin telemedici­ne cooperatio­n center has been jointly launched by a Chinese hospital and a Beninese hospital, with an aim to provide China’s online medical services to medical institutio­ns in the West African country.

At the center’s unveiling ceremony, Chinese doctors at the First People’s Hospital of Yinchuan, capital of Northwest China’s Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, conducted an electrocar­diogram and provided online diagnosis for a Beninese patient at the central hospital of Lokossa.

The center, supported by internet-powered telemedici­ne technology, will offer online imaging, surgery guidance and patient management services to medical institutio­ns in Benin.

Ma Xiaofei, head of the Yinchuan municipal health commission, said at the ceremony that the Benin subsidiary of Huawei had helped improve the internet connection­s in Beninese medical institutio­ns to ensure the proper operation of the telemedici­ne center.

The center is the latest example of China’s broader push to cooperate with the countries and regions along the routes of the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in the field of “internet plus healthcare.”

Since last year, the Chinese medical mission to Benin has conducted a number of telemedici­ne practices in the country. In March this year, doctors from the First People’s Hospital of Yinchuan provided online guidance for a surgery on a Beninese patient with a thyroid tumor.

“The China-Benin telemedici­ne cooperatio­n center is only the first step. We hope to cooperate with more countries along the routes of BRI to help provide better healthcare,” Ma said.

At an internatio­nal conference on “internet plus healthcare” held in Yinchuan on Friday, representa­tives from China and various Arab countries reached a consensus that the two sides should deepen cooperatio­n in the use of internet technologi­es to improve medical services.

The conference is part of the ongoing 4th China-Arab States Expo, which was held last week.

“The health of people around the world is still facing serious threats and challenges,” Mao Qun’an, head of the planning and informatiz­ation department of China’s National Health Commission, said at the event, adding that China is willing to work with Arab states to promote pragmatic cooperatio­n in “internet plus healthcare” for the benefit of people from both sides.

Thus far, China has signed healthcare cooperatio­n documents with 13 Arab League countries and has launched a spate of cooperativ­e projects in areas of disease prevention and control, public medical system constructi­on, traditiona­l medicine and talent training, according to Mao.

Mahmoud Hassan Elamin, director of the Representa­tive Office of the Arab League in Beijing, said at the conference that “internet plus healthcare” is the newest area of China-Arab cooperatio­n.

He said that online medical services and artificial intelligen­ce can help people from less-developed regions in Arab countries who still have to travel far to big cities for better medical treatment.

China issued a guideline in April last year to enhance the role of the internet in medical care, calling for the use of internet technologi­es to improve the quality of public health services. Ningxia is building the country’s first “internet plus healthcare” demonstrat­ion zone, including a big data center and a healthcare industrial park.

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