Chinanews.com, Guangzhou, February 26th (Reporter Guo Jun) The reporter learned from Guangdong Clifford Hospital, the only Hong Kong-owned third-class hospital in the Mainland, that on the basis of cooperation with existing Hong Kong medical institutions, the hospital will also More than a dozen Hong Kong doctors have been introduced to the clinic, and together with the "Hong Kong and Macau Medicine and Device Link" policy, it has benefited Hong Kong, Macau and local people in the Mainland in an all-round way to facilitate medical treatment, and has promoted the medical integration of Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau in the Greater Bay Area.

  It is understood that the Clifford New Village, which is backed by the Guangdong Clifford Hospital, is a demonstration area of ​​a high-quality living circle in Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau. There are more than 10,000 Hong Kong and Macau owners in the village.

Over the years, they have long been accustomed to seek medical treatment at Guangdong Clifford Hospital.

As early as 2005, Clifford Hospital took the lead in introducing 13 Hong Kong doctors in the country.

In 2020, the hospital again applied for more than ten Hong Kong doctors from oncology, gynecology, internal medicine, pediatrics, and rehabilitation to practice in the hospital (delayed due to the impact of the epidemic).

In 2022, the hospital will also cooperate with Hong Kong medical institutions such as Zhuangbo Medical Center and Yidao Medical (Hong Kong) in patient referral, expert consultation, green channel, exchange and learning, etc.

  On the 22nd, the Guangdong Provincial Health and Health Commission released the list of the second batch of designated medical institutions for the "Hong Kong-Macao Medicine Network" in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area. 14 medical institutions including Guangdong Clifford Hospital and the First Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University were selected.

Among them, Guangdong Clifford Hospital is the first and only designated hospital in Panyu District, Guangzhou.

  Regarding the announcement of the second batch of designated medical institutions, Ms. Li, a Hong Kong resident who has lived in Qifu New Village, Panyu District, for 20 years, said: "It's really great!" She has suffered from essential hypertension for many years, and her 80-year-old mother He also suffers from chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease and kidney disease, and needs to take medicine for a long time.

Because she is used to taking medicines in Hong Kong, before the epidemic, she had to go back to Hong Kong to get medicines every half a month, and spent a day on the road.

After the implementation of the "Hong Kong and Macau Medicine and Device Link" policy in Guangdong Clifford Hospital, the latest medicine and equipment listed in Hong Kong and Macau can be used without leaving the country.

  Professor Zhou Yingling, executive director of Guangdong Clifford Hospital, said that with the official establishment of the "Hong Kong-Macau Medicine and Device Communication" policy, the hospital has planned to introduce at least a dozen Hong Kong and Macao medical devices for cardiovascular, tumor, chronic disease and other related specialties, such as structural heart Drugs for diseases, blood lipid control drugs with good clinical effect, etc.

The hospital has currently formulated a clear control plan for the "Hong Kong-Macau Medicine and Device Communication" in order to strictly supervise the entry and exit of specialized medical devices and the flow of use to ensure the safety of medication.

  Zhang Tao, executive director of Guangdong Clifford Hospital, said that in the past, it was a big problem that Hong Kong doctors could not prescribe Hong Kong medicine or use familiar Hong Kong equipment when they came to Guangzhou to practice. This is just the first step, and this year the hospital will try to arrange for Hong Kong doctors to come to the hospital, and is also actively striving to become a pilot hospital for the use of Hong Kong medical vouchers, so as to facilitate the elderly in Hong Kong to retire and seek medical treatment in the mainland.” (End)