BEIJING: Internet-based health services, supported by government policies and information technology, are gathering steam in China, a process partly hastened due to COVID-19.
A remarkable rise has been seen in the use of such services since China’s State Council or the Cabinet released a guideline on promoting “internet plus health services” in 2018.
Number of internet hospitals in China soared from just over 100 in December 2018 to more than 1,600 in June this year, official figures showed, indicating online health services were already a key part of the country’s health service system.
The number of people who availed of internet-based health services from the 44 hospitals directly under the management of China’s National Health Commission (NHC) in 2020 was 18 times that in 2019, said Ye Quanfu, head of the commission’s National Institute of Hospital Administration.
Online health consultation sought via third-party platforms multiplied more than 20 times from 2019, Ye added, citing research data.
The internet hospital of Peking Union Medical College Hospital (PUMCH), one of China’s most reputed, is the first of its kind in Beijing to be accredited by authorities.
People can now seek online health services from more than 1,200 doctors in 38 departments of the PUMCH. Around 70,000 patients have availed of the services this way.
An immediate benefit of internet technologies, including through web hospitals, is that information helps cut the legwork that patients used to do. – Agencies