Trying to
see a doctor in China's public hospitals can be a painful experience, often
involving queueing overnight just to get a consultation lasting a few minutes.
A Chinese
Internet firm is attepting to address the problem by providing Chinese patients
online access to licensed doctors in more than 2,400 hospitals across the
country.
The
Wuzhen Internet Hospital based in Wuzhen, a riverside town in eastern China's
Zhejiang Province, was founded in December 2015 to provide services via an app
it has developed called We Doctor.
Zhang
Guimin, marketing director of the company, described the firm as the medical
version of Uber, where patients can describe their illness and arrange
appropriate doctors.
"Doctors
can pick up orders on their own and confirm an appointment for an online
diagnosis when they have time," Zhang said.
The
medical service is the online equivalent to a hospital outpatient service.
Users can get prescriptions and pay bills on their cellphones, and have
medicines delivered afterwards.
They can
also make face-to-face appointments with doctors through the app.
"It
is better to see a patient in person in the case of a serious illness,"
said Chen Aiguo, head of the surgical department at Tongxiang No.3 People's
Hospital, Zhejiang, "The app is very helpful for making appointments and
conducting further consultations. You can just do it with your phone."
Zhang is
among 26,000 doctors registered on We Doctor. The app sees an average of 31,000
appointments made each day.
"The
app helps connect well-known doctors with patients from not only major cities
but also rural areas," Zhang said. "It helps balance unevenly
distributed medical resources."
Home to
the world's largest online community, 710 million people as of June 2016, more
than 95 percent of China's cities, towns and villages now have broadband.
Wuzhen
Internet Hospital set up a branch in southwest China's Sichuan Province in
October to facilitate remote diagnosis services in the poverty-stricken
Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture.
Qiu Jipo,
47, lives in the mountainous Qiaodi Township and was among the first to use the
service. Suffering from femoral head necrosis and arthritis, Qiu has a
five-hour walk to the nearest clinic that can treat him.
Through a
remote video system set up by We Doctor's Sichuan branch, Han Sijing, a veteran
doctor from 416 Hospital in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan, is able to diagnose
Qiu, and supervise a local specialist in the township's clinic to treat him.
"Seeing
a doctor outside the town or a doctor from a top-level hospital had been
unthinkable before," Qiu said.
Besides
the Internet hospital in Sichuan, Wuzhen Internet Hospital has branches in 16
cities and provinces, including Beijing, northwest China's Gansu Province and
southwest China's Guizhou Province.
The
Internet firm plans to set up 100 branches over the next three years, providing
online medical consultations and e-prescription via cellphones or remote video
systems.
(Source:
Xinhua)