China Daily

HEALTH WEALTH

Asia is revolution­izing global medical firms

- By BEN YUE in Doha, Qatar benyue@chinadaily­hk.com

It may be the best time ever to be living right now. Over the past four decades, the life expectancy of Asians has increased by more than a decade to more than 70 years, thanks to the developmen­t of the healthcare industry.

New drugs, medical equipment, therapies, organizati­ons, policies and healthcare systems have emerged one after another, bringing improvemen­ts in people’s lives and changes in their thinking about health management.

“In the last century, the biggest challenges we had were communicab­le disease and infectious diseases. Now we are moving into the new century. Our biggest challenges now are NCDs (non-communicab­le diseases) such as obesity and mental health problems,” says Ara Darzi, chairman of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College London and executive chairman of the World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH). The latest WISH seminar was held in December in Doha, Qatar.

Darzi says although the challenges in tackling diseases are similar around the world, adapting to innovation­s differs. “What’s interestin­g about Asia is that the uptake seems to be quicker in some parts of this region,” he says.

China has done a remarkable job in healthcare system reform, he believes, especially in tackling the shortage of per capita healthcare resources.

“The human capital shortage is a big challenge in Asia,” he says. “If big countries such as China run the healthcare system the same way Europe does, it will probably take another 20 years to have enough general practition­ers.”

That in many ways has driven China and some other Asian countries to think in a different way, coming up with “workforce-reducing innovation­s”, which include giving patients technologi­es to substitute the need for more doctors.

Also, it is practical to use nurse practition­ers and other clinicians, rather than purely relying on doctors, he points out.

“Patient engagement will be the blockbuste­r drug of the 21st century, which will help countries shepherd resources,” said Susan Edgman-Levitan, executive director of the Stoeckle Center for Primary Care Innovation at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, at the WISH meeting.

Across Asia, healthcare costs are rising faster than countries’ ability to meet them. Experts argue that the answer to the crisis is not going to come from doing more of the same.

Instead, a fundamenta­l shift toward harnessing the patients and the public who care about improving their own health could be the solution.

In India, patients are helping to combat counterfei­t medicine by using free text messaging to verify authentici­ty through the organizati­on mPedigree Network.

The network partnered with several pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers to place an authentici­ty code on product packaging so that patients, providers, distributo­rs and manufactur­ers can utilize the free service to confirm the product’s authentici­ty at the point of sale or transfer.

According to a report published by the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit, the annual average per capita healthcare spending in the Asia-Pacific region has more than doubl e d between 2001 and 2011, from $150 to $362. It is expected to reach $546 by 2016.

The soar ing costs spent on the healthcare sector stimulate the creation of higher quality products with lower costs to suit the demands of local markets.

More global medical giants such as GE Healthcare, Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceut­icals and Medtronic Inc have either set up global research and developmen­t centers or moved headquarte­rs to Asia to meet the special needs of the local market.

Most healthcare innovation­s are now made to treat NCDs, with experts believing that Asia is leading the way in innovation­s to deal with the rising cases.

NCDs such as diabetes, mental health problems and antimicrob­ial resistance (or drug resistance) are becoming more common in everyday life in Asia, driven by the changing lifestyle patterns and widespread urbanizati­on.

According to WISH, deaths from communicab­le diseases are dramatical­ly decreasing globally, while deaths from NCDs are projected to increase. The number of global NCD-related deaths is estimated to surge from 28.1 million per year in 1990 to around 49.7 million per year in 2020.

In Southeast Asia alone, more than 7.9 million people die from NCDs every year, according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). The number is projected to increase by 21 percent over the next decade.

To make the situation worse, 34 percent of NCD-related deaths in the region occur before the age of 60, compared with 23 percent in the rest of the world.

Cardiovasc­ular diseases alone account for a quarter of all deaths, followed by chronic respirator­y diseases, cancers and diabetes.

A report published by Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice shows that China and India now have the largest diabetic population­s in the world, comprising around 51 million and 43 million people respective­ly.

Diabetes prevalence in Asia is expected to rise rapidly by 2030, with the highest prevalence ratio in Sri Lanka, Malaysia and South Korea.

According to the WISH estimates, 44 percent of all counterfei­t antibiotic­s in the world are distribute­d in Southeast Asia, compared with 30 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa and 9 percent in the West.

Two-thirds of hospitaliz­ed patients in China receive antibiotic­s, when the rate of usage in other countries is 30 percent.

In terms of mental illness ratio, about 17 percent of Chinese people are suffering from mild or severe problems, a figure much higher than the 10 percent world average ratio.

In the medical equipment market, Chinese, Indian and South Korean manufactur­ers are streets ahead of their competitor­s.

Although they make products of lower quality than the multinatio­nals, they are more affordable and meet the basic needs of the average healthcare provider, according to a recent report by healthcare market research consultanc­y Clearstate.

Government­s in Asia have actively joined the movements in the industry to build better healthcare systems.

Accountabl­e care, a buzzword in the healthcare sector which refers to delivering integrated healthcare based on patients’ real need to improve quality and cut costs, has also proved to be successful in some parts of Asia, the WISH meeting showcased.

Singapore’s Agency for Integrated Care (AIC) is a good example. From 2008, the Singaporea­n government set the AIC system to deal with escalating healthcare demands of the aging population.

By categorizi­ng different patient groups, setting community medical homes to cover relevant patients and transiting patients from hospitals into the appropriat­e long-term community-care program, it has reduced a patient’s chance by more than 40 percent of being re-admitted to hospital within 30 days of discharge, saving more than $11 million a year on the cost of hospital re-admissions.

“A key issue is leadership — to shake up the system,” says Jason Cheah, chief executive of the AIC.

The demand to cut costs has brought more healthcare innovation­s from the supply side to the demand side, said Simon Stevens, president of the global health division at UnitedHeal­th Group.

Stevens added that fundamenta­l healthcare innovation­s in the next decade will come from outside the healthcare sector, such as technology developmen­ts and inter-sector cooperatio­n.

Many Asian countries have tried to coordinate different government department­s to deal with healthcare challenges. For example, in the Sultanate of Oman, the government has developed a collaborat­ive mechanism that enables the healthcare sector to work with the education sector and food industry in dealing with the growing obesity rate in children.

The common use of smartphone­s also provides opportunit­ies from the new technology, such as phone applicatio­ns to monitor blood pressure, blood sugar and nutrition condition, in addition to data collecting and analysis that can lead to more efficient healthcare solutions based on daily behavior.

Given the huge population in Asia and shortage of medical infrastruc­ture, the latest innovation­s are especially promising.

“The healthcare environmen­t has changed from five years ago. The changing environmen­t has changed the way technology leaders invest,” says John Dineen, president and CEO of GE Healthcare. The company is now investing to improve quality, efficiency and access at the same time.

For example, GE Healthcare developed Vscan, a pocketsize­d ultrasound scanner, that helps assist local health workers to reduce the maternal mortality rate in the hinterland of Indonesia where hospitals cannot afford expensive medical equipment.

He says the settings of healthcare have changed transition­ing from hospitals to clinics, to home, to the field.

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