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          Hong Kong residents migrating north for better healthcare

          Greater Bay Area hospitals offer them affordable, high-quality medical treatment

          By ZHOU MO and WANG XU in Shenzhen | China Daily Global | Updated: 2024-08-26 07:17
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          A general practitioner examines a patient at the health service center for Hong Kong and Macao residents in Guangzhou in August 2022. CHEN CHUHONG/CHINA NEWS SERVICE

          Confidence in services

          The three major reasons Hong Kong patients visit Shenzhen are the cheap prices, the high quality of services, and the good experience, said Yu Sze-yuen, director of the office for cross-border healthcare services at the University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital.

          Yu said Hong Kong patients paid 138,000 visits to the hospital between February 2023 and February 2024.

          The number of visits by Hong Kong patients to the hospital's outpatient department reached 40,493 in the first quarter of this year, accounting for 10.4 percent of the total.

          Hong Kong patients also made 2,471 visits to the Shenzhen hospital's emergency department, while visits for physical examinations and inpatient services were 1,264 and 1,197, respectively, over the period.

          According to Zheng Yuyan, director of the Stomatology Center at Shenzhen People's Hospital, Hong Kong residents accounted for 5 percent of the total number of patients in 2023, and the proportion is expected to rise this year because of the heating up northbound trend.

          The Stomatology Center is one of the most popular departments chosen by Hong Kong residents due to its cost advantage compared with dental clinics in Hong Kong offering similar medical services.

          "At present, the Stomatology Center has nurses who can speak Cantonese and English at the guidance desk. Doctors also conduct online patient group chats for communication after treatment and plan to open an online consultation channel for Hong Kong residents in the future," said Zheng.

          Chen Xiaoqiong, deputy general manager of CKJ, a dental organization in Shenzhen, believes the consumption patterns of Hong Kong residents have changed a lot since the border reopening. "Thanks to improvements in the transport network and the development of digital payments, it has become much easier and more convenient for Hong Kong residents to travel to Shenzhen."

          Chen said HK residents have gained more knowledge about the mainland and "the convenience of healthcare there".

          CKJ received over 40,000 visits by Hong Kong patients in the first quarter of this year.

          "The average monthly number of visits by Hong Kong patients this year stands at 14,000, compared with 10,000 last year, so we can see that the number is on the rise," she said.

          Path smoothed

          To make it easier for its residents to get more affordable healthcare across the border, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government has launched several initiatives in recent years.

          In February, it announced the extension of the Elderly Health Care Voucher GBA(Greater Bay Area) Pilot Scheme, which lets eligible elderly people to use healthcare vouchers to pay for cross-border outpatient healthcare services. It now covers in total nine medical institutions, including CKJ, in the GBA.

          Seven medical institutions in Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan and Zhongshan were added to the program, which is expected to benefit up to 1.7 million Hong Kong people.

          In March, Hong Kong's Health Bureau announced that the Pilot Scheme for Supporting Patients of the Hospital Authority in the GBA would be extended for another 12 months.

          Under the scheme, which was launched in May 2023, eligible patients only need to pay a 100-yuan consultation fee at the University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital. The remainder of the fee, up to a 2,000-yuan limit, is subsidized by the government.

          Over 4,000 Hong Kong patients had enrolled in the scheme by the end of February.

          In 2021, the Hong Kong and Macao Medicine and Equipment Connect program was introduced. It allows medicine and medical devices that are already on the Hong Kong market to be used in designated medical institutions in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area after approval.

          As of mid-January, 28 drugs and 28 medical equipment items had secured approval for use in 19 medical institutions.

          Wong, from the Federation of Trade Unions, said cross-border medical cooperation is at a preliminary stage, and added that "overall progress has to be accelerated".

          The elderly healthcare voucher scheme, for example, should be expanded to 3A hospitals or accredited private medical institutions in GBA cities, where more and more Hong Kong people have chosen to settle or retire, he said.

          "The recent announcement of seven more GBA medical institutions to be included in the EHCV GBA Pilot Scheme merely widens the door to 'welfare portability'. There is still a lot of work to be done in the overall integration of medical systems between the two places," Wong said.

          As early as 2022, Macao's medical insurance subsidies were extended to nine GBA cities for residents aged 65 or above, or below 10, primary and secondary school students, and people with disabilities.

          "Now that Macao can do it, so can Hong Kong," Wong said.

          Integration key

          HKSAR Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu stressed the importance of making good use of healthcare services in the GBA in his 2023 Policy Address delivered in October.

          The city's Secretary for Health, Lo Chung-mau, said the HKSAR government is exploring arrangements with suitable GBA healthcare institutions for purchasing healthcare services.

          "The initial idea is to start with healthcare services with immense demand and lower risks, such as investigation or imaging services, and devise a service model for the purchase and specific arrangements under the premise of compliance with the relevant laws and regulations of both places," Lo said in May.

          He said the HKSAR government will continue to monitor the progress of various cross — border healthcare collaboration initiatives. It will also explore feasible measures to support the medical needs of Hong Kong residents more effectively, he added.

          "The government's policy objective is to enable Hong Kong people who travel between or reside in the two places and some of those who intend to settle in the GBA, to reside and integrate into local life, instead of solely relying on healthcare resources on the mainland to meet the needs of Hong Kong people," Lo said.

          The HKSAR government is also discussing with city governments the provision of cross-border ambulance services to enable point-to-point hospital transfers of patients.

          At present, patients who need to be transferred from a Shenzhen hospital to one in Hong Kong have to leave the ambulance and clear customs before getting in another vehicle on the other side of the border, which is difficult for those in critical condition.

          Yu, from the University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital, said the provision of cross-border ambulance services involves a large amount of paperwork that needs to be addressed by different government departments.

          "Hong Kong and Guangdong have their own laws and regulations regarding customs clearance of people and vehicles, management of dangerous drugs and equipment, …which requires a lot of time for coordination," he said.

          The governments on both sides are actively working on the matter and "hopefully, this service will be implemented within this year", Yu said.

          Chen, from CKJ, believes cross-border healthcare will become a long-term trend and demand will grow as regional integration in the GBA further deepens.

          However, there are challenges that need to be addressed in the process, she said.

          Obstacles to overcome

          Differences in laws and regulations between Hong Kong and the mainland present a major obstacle for medical integration.

          "Licensing of physicians, insurance reimbursement policies, data privacy protection… all these issues require a sound regulatory system and mechanism," Chen said.

          Language and cultural differences could also have an impact on cross-border medical services, she said. "How to enhance consumer trust is another problem that needs to be considered," Chen added.

          While acknowledging that cross-border medical cooperation could help alleviate Hong Kong's healthcare burden, Wong believes more effort is needed from Hong Kong.

          He called for reforming medical licensing examinations and bridging courses, so that veteran doctors from the mainland and abroad have channels to connect and align with Hong Kong professionals.

          "To alleviate the manpower shortage, it is suggested that Hong Kong establish an 'associate doctor' system through promotion of limited registration for both overseas medical talents, and those who have been already practicing as a 'community doctor' in the city," he said.

          "With these pragmatic adjustments, the system could better utilize these professionals and effectively protect the rights of patients," he added.

          Yi Yang in Shenzhen contributed to this story.

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