The Ministry of Health and Welfare of Taiwan and the Taiwan External Trade
Development Council (TAITRA) organized recently the “Join hands with Taiwan to
create a healthy and happy life” webinar, which was held at the Taipei International
Convention Center.
During the meeting, five physicians and experts shared the latest medical
technology, treatment methods, and services with regard to bone marrow
transplantation, reproductive medicine, depression, cerebrovascular disease,
and telemedicine consultation with friends in the Philippines and other
Southeast Asian countries to offer more treatment options for patients in need.
The event attracted around 900 viewers who participated online and were
able to see the live broadcast in real-time.
(From Left) Mr. Onag, a patient from the Philippines, Dr. Chi-Cheng Li, Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital,
Dr. Pin-Yao Lin, Lee Women’s Hospital, Ms. Elina H.L. Lee, Executive Vice President, TAITRA,
Mr. Chin-Tang Wang, President, Medicrowd Smarthealth Co., Ltd., Dr. Ping-Sheng Lu, Landseed International Hospital
In her speech, Executive Vice President Elina Lee of TAITRA stated that
various countries had recognized Taiwan’s epidemic prevention achievements. To
share epidemic prevention information with the international community, TAITRA
launched the “Taiwan Global Anti-COVID-19 Pavilion” in June this year. For
decades now, Taiwan has already established a sound medical system as it recruited
the best medical talents and adapted the best technologies to provide
high-quality medical services.
Dr. Chi-Cheng Li, Director of the Center of Stem Cell and Precision
Medicine of Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital, said that allogeneic hematopoietic stem
cell transplantation is often the ultimate cure for blood cancer or major blood
diseases. Before, two unrelated people have only one in ten thousand chances of
matching the bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells. But now, through the
“half-matched hematopoietic stem cell transplantation technique,” the
possibility of successful matching is as high as 90% in relatives, which
significantly improves patients’ survival rate.
For 51-year-old Filipino patient Ronel Onag, who recently returned to the Philippines,
he graced the event to share his journey and experience recovering from
the “half-matched hematopoietic stem cell transplantation” and shed tears of joy. “I am very grateful to Director
Chi-Cheng Li and the medical team at Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital for their care
and the factory owner and friends for the initial connection. In September of last year,
I was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. It was tough to accept my illness.
My wife and I felt very sad and helpless. Fortunately, I have now regained my
health with everyone’s help.” He also encouraged other patients not to lose
hope and stay positive!
Mr. Onag, a patient from the Philippine gave Dr. Chi-Cheng Li of Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital a thank you card
Dr. Pin-Yao Lin, Director of the Department of Reproductive Medicine at
Lee Women’s Hospital, shared also a case from the Philippines, Mrs. Li (39
years old). Women who are over 35 and have recurrent miscarriages can improve
their embryo implantation rate and pregnancy rate through preimplantation
genetic diagnosis (PGD) and preimplantation genetic screening (PGS). Mrs. Li
also shared her experience of seeking a child through a pre-recorded video. She
already experienced two miscarriages before the age of 37 so she decided to
undergo PGS for the remaining frozen embryos at the hospital that Dr. Lin
recommended. They quickly learned that one of the embryos carry abnormal
chromosomes and chose to implant the other two with normal chromosomes to avoid
the risk of another miscarriage. She eventually gave birth to twins in 2019 and
became a happy mother.
Besides sharing successful cases of superior medical services in Taiwan,
the event also invited Cathay General Hospital, Landseed International Hospital,
and Medicrowd Smarthealth Co., Ltd. to share psychological and physiological
health management and application tools with Chinese people worldwide. Dr. Mao-Xiang Xiao from Cathay General Hospital mentioned a new “r-TMS (Repetitive
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation)” treatment for depression. The repeated and
concentrated magnetic pulses stimulate the brain’s emotional management area
allowing neurons to release serotonin and other cognitive function hormones to
relieve depression.
Dr. Ping-Sheng Lu, the Neuroscience Center of Landseed International
Hospital, said that Asians have a higher risk of cerebrovascular disease than Western
people. Reports show that the prevalence rate of cerebral aneurysms in Asian
adults is 7%, and with the popularity of imaging inspections, more and more
early discoveries are made. Also, unruptured aneurysms treatment by
transarterial catheterization is minimally invasive compared with traditional
craniotomy.
Finally, President Chin-Tang Wang of Medicrowd Smarthealth stated that
more than 1,000 cooperative physicians provide telemedicine consulting services
online on their medical network. During the epidemic, this service’s
utilization rate increased significantly by 47.8%, of which ENT (increased by
135%) and psychology (increased by 41%) were the most significant. President
Wang emphasized that digital healthcare is a global trend, and the new
coronavirus disease has accelerated this trend. Taiwan’s achievements in
epidemic prevention have attracted worldwide attention, and its medical
technology is among the world’s best. This is a new opportunity to globalize
Taiwan’s medical services, where the online to offline (O2O) integrated
“all-customer” service model will be the future of healthcare.