GLOBALHealthPR » Brittany Allgood http://www.globalhealthpr.com Thu, 17 Sep 2015 16:10:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.5 China’s Economic Growth is a Catalyst for Change in the Country’s Health Care System http://www.globalhealthpr.com/market-access/chinas-economic-growth-is-a-catalyst-for-change-in-the-countrys-health-care-system/ http://www.globalhealthpr.com/market-access/chinas-economic-growth-is-a-catalyst-for-change-in-the-countrys-health-care-system/#comments Thu, 05 Dec 2013 16:29:55 +0000 http://globalhealthpr.com/ghprblog/?p=1208 Whether we’re talking about a family, business or count […]

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Whether we’re talking about a family, business or country, significant growth inevitably causes a ripple effect of change and requires careful management to keep the proverbial engines running smoothly. As we’ve seen with Google and Apple, properly managed growth can elevate a business to empire status.

Within a decade, China will have the world’s largest economy. As its economy grows, cultural, labor and population trends are shifting. The “Chinese dream” is evolving to resemble the “American dream” as citizens increasingly strive to improve their quality of life. Young adults are going to college instead of working in factories and an emerging middle class works towards home ownership and material wealth.

China’s gradual cultural shift from collectivistic to individualistic is incongruent with its authoritarian government system. Can China maintain a sustainable, healthy business community with existing, limiting government regulation? My guess is no. Will the Chinese government continue to reevaluate its traditional ideals and adjust regulation to nurture its version of the industrial revolution? I hope so.

How is this impacting China’s health care system?

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According to research conducted by Yanzhong Huang, senior global fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, other nations that liberalized their economies outperformed China in the health care category during this stage of transformation. Many factors are contributing to China’s lacking health care system, including:

  • China’s government expected the private sector to step in as it terminated state-sponsored health care, but this did not happen.
  • Many Chinese medical centers are still managed by political appointees or health care practitioners versus professionally trained hospital administrators, according to research conducted at Yale.
  • Committed to universal health care, China extended coverage to 95% of the population, according to Wharton health care management professor Lawton R. Burns. For many consumers, this is the first time they’ve had access to health care, and they expect quality. Lines form early in the morning to see a physician and providers are strained to keep up with demand.
  • Scarcity is a rising concern in China as consumer demand increases, according to global economy experts Damien Ma and Bill Adams in their book In Line Behind a Billion People. For example, increasing scarcity of social services is likely to limit health care availability unless something is done about it. Could scarcity in health care usher in a new era of mHealth?

Is the future bright for China’s health care system?

China’s 2009 wave of health care reform adjusted some policies to accommodate shifting circumstances, but continuous reform is needed to balance health care access, cost and quality while keeping up with cultural and economic change.

How is change in health care policy in your country affecting you?

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Strategically Addressing Health Care Challenges: Smart Cards Improve African Health Care http://www.globalhealthpr.com/insights-trends/505/ http://www.globalhealthpr.com/insights-trends/505/#comments Fri, 09 Aug 2013 14:05:03 +0000 http://globalhealthpr.com/ghprblog/?p=505 Zambia efficiently tracks medical histories and public […]

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Zambia efficiently tracks medical histories and public health. “Why not bring it to the US?” asks Brittany Allgood of Spectrum, GlobalHealthPR partner in the United States.

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Brittany Allgood

In a land where health care illiteracy is prevalent and disease outbreaks can spread quickly due to poor environmental and sanitation conditions, how do you efficiently document individual medical histories and monitor public health?

In Zambia, health care institutions are using innovative technology to track and cater to health care needs. SmartCare – conceived in 2003 and developed by Zambia’s Ministry of Health and the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention – is an electronic health record (EHR) system designed with local challenges in mind.

How does it work?aaa

Similar to loading money onto a D.C. Metro SmartTrip card, medical personnel can load a patient’s health care records onto a SmartCare card to be taken home for safe keeping. Records include personal information about illness, prescriptions, lab results and more, and data analysis of records can reveal trends in the spread of disease.

The SmartCare system is designed to function in areas with minimal telecommunication capabilities and frequent power outages. Lending credibility to the system and expanding its reach, the World Health Organization, USAID and UNICEF are among SmartCare partners.

The result?

In addition to aiding doctor efficiency with user-friendly, rapid data-entry capabilities, SmartCare is intended to improve data accuracy and enable cost-effective, confidential, life-long quality health care.

With the benefits to Zambian patients in mind, I wonder how this system can be applied to improve health care in other parts of the world. For example, considering the system’s reliability and ease of use, how could it be used to improve health care in disaster relief situations?

What’s up with electronic medical records in the U.S.?

Even in a community where the average person can complete a medical form unaided, there are benefits to implementing an EHR system. Think about it – how much time have you wasted filling and re-filling out forms at the doctor or dentist office? Are you sure you remembered every detail each time?

We’ve all heard about the Affordable Care Act, which goes into effect on January 1, 2014. We won’t go into the details here, but one program initiative is to advance the transition from paper records to EHRs. According to Medical News Today, many question the ease of use and integration process of this new IT system, and there’s no doubt that others are concerned about privacy issues.

Can we take a lesson from our friends in Africa?

A SmartCare system in the U.S. could address concerns about ease of use and confidentiality of EHRs. Personally, I’d appreciate having a password-protected card or flash drive containing all my medical records and insurance information. If doctors and dentists accepted this form of information transference, it would save a lot of time during visits.

What’s your take on adopting EHRs in the U.S. – an important initiative or expensive waste of time?

 

 

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