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Taiwan stages APEC conference on medical information sharing
2019-08-12

Health experts and officials give the thumbs-up during the APEC medical information sharing conference Aug. 8 in Taipei City. (Courtesy of MOHW)

Health experts and officials give the thumbs-up during the APEC medical information sharing conference Aug. 8 in Taipei City. (Courtesy of MOHW)

An Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference on medical information sharing wrapped up Aug. 9 in Taipei City, spotlighting the government’s success in advancing APEC health and well-being initiatives.
 
Organized by the Ministry of Health and Welfare, the event involved more than 300 academics, business representatives, experts and officials from Taiwan and other APEC member economies like Australia, Canada, Indonesia, Japan, Peru, Russia, Singapore, South Korea and the U.S.

Over the course of the two-day conference, participants discussed the key topics such as harnessing the power of medical information exchanges in improving health care, best practices for collecting and utilizing related data, employing information communication technology to strengthen services and treatment standards in medical facilities.
 
The event also featured keynote speeches on Taiwan’s National Health Insurance MediCloud System by NHI Administration Director-General Dr. Lee Po-chang, as well as Singapore’s National Electronic Health Record and other health ICT programs by Cheng Ooi Low, chief medical informatics officer of the city-state’s Ministry of Health.
 
Lee said since the NHI introduced the PharmaCloud medical record management system in 2013 and expanded its function three years later, total savings from eliminating duplicate or excessive medication stands at around NT$370 million (US$11.8 million) as of June 2019. Savings from cloud-based sharing of clinical test results are estimated at NT$1.2 billion over the same period, he added.
 
According to the MOHW, during meetings between Health Minister Chen Shih-chung and his foreign counterparts on the sidelines of the World Health Assembly May 20-28 in Geneva, many were deeply impressed by Taiwan’s success in promoting cloud-based medical information sharing and expressed great interest in learning from Taiwan.
 
The conference provided an excellent opportunity for Taiwan to showcase its medical high-tech prowess while sharing achievements with like-minded partners, the MOHW said, adding that it also helped promote the country’s related sectors on the global stage.
 
Since joining APEC in 1991, Taiwan has made substantial contributions to the regional economic forum. These span a broad spectrum of areas such as disaster prevention, food security, small and medium enterprise development and women’s empowerment. (SFC-E)