Augustus Chang and Raymond Cai

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
+ Healthcare in Spain Presented By: Wes Bates, Megan Saksefski, Katie Butler, and Victoria Lyon.
Advertisements

Patterns of Elderly Life Expectancy in Three Chinese Cities: Hong Kong, Shanghai and Taipei Jiaying Zhao (ANU) Edward Jow-Ching Tu (HKUST) Zhongwei Zhao.
Health and Social Policies in Sweden Caitlin Smith.
HEALTH INEQUITIES EXPERIENCED IN RURAL V URBAN Alicia Haywood Policy & Advocacy Manager.
Health system of Serbia - European models of financing Wednesday, 2nd March, 2011, Danas Conference Center, GTC Avenija 19, Vladimira Popovića
The Goal. Note: Population figures for do not add to the total because of rounding. Source: U.S. Census Bureau.
Brief Introduction of Community Healthcare Reform in China Shanlian Hu. MD. MSc. Professor School of Public Health Fudan University June 5, 2009 Shanghai.
Health Care in China. Health care system in China The New Rural Co-operative Medical Care System (NRCMCS) is a 2005 initiative to overhaul the healthcare.
The Canadian Healthcare System Lecture 4 Tracey Lynn Koehlmoos, PhD, MHA HSCI 609 Comparative International Health Systems.
Socio-Economic Implications of Health Disparities International Council on Social Welfare - ICSW Tuvia Horev Taub Center for Social Policy Studies in Israel.
Snapshots of World Health: Comparisons Around the Globe.
Collaborating Partners –Edward R. Roybal Comprehensive Health Center (East Los Angeles) –Hubert H. Humphrey Comprehensive Health Center (South Los Angeles)
Use of Census Data for Gender Statistics in Lao PDR Presented by : Thirakha CHANTHALANOUVONG Social Statistics Department Lao Statistics Bureau Workshop.
Health Care System and Reimbursements Issues in China Lu Ye School of Public Health Fudan University.
Program Development for Safety Net Institutions Catherine Deamant, MD Director, Palliative Care Services Cook County Health and Hospitals System Coleman.
Towards an Inclusive Migration Health Framework: A Large Urban Perspective by Dr. Sheela Basrur Medical Officer of Health Toronto Public Health.
General Introduction of Community Health Services in the Hongkou District Amy Jiang, MPA Shanghai, China.
Are Local Health Department Expenditures Related to Racial Disparities in Mortality? David Grembowski Douglas Conrad Betty Bekemeier William Kreuter University.
Excess cost growth in Medicare, Medicaid, and all other health care spending Source: CBO, A Federal Perspective on Health Care Policy and Costs, 2008.
P4P and China’s Health Care Reform: Current State, Opportunities and Challenges Winnie Yip Reader in Health Policy and Economics University of Oxford “Incentives.
Health Care In Latvia Current Situation And Challenges In the Future Ingrīda Circene Minister for Health of the Republic of Latvia Riga,
National Center for Policy Analysis Making Ideas Change the World Myths About National Health Insurance.
The Medical Assistant field has increased dramatically in the last decade, being able to perform many task in doctors offices and hospitals makes this.
Health Care System in Estonia Healthcare Department Ministry of Social Affairs of Estonia.
Sanford USD Medical Center Sioux Falls, SD Becky Nelson, Senior VP & COO Health Service Operations Sanford Health.
Linda Devereux Associate Director Merseyside and Cheshire Cancer Network - why we are here and what’s next!
MBCG Project Primary Results MEDICALSURVEYS-17 RESEARCH GROUP IN COLLABORATION WITH THE EASO.
1 Patient Safety In China Gao Xinqiang 23 June 2014.
The Medical Assistant field has increased dramatically in the last decade, being able to perform many task in doctors offices and hospitals makes this.
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act The Greens: Elijah, Amber, Kayla, Patrick.
Health social system in China Lian Tong Doctoral student (D3) Sep 29, 2010 Lab of International Community Care and Lifespan Development.
Human Development Indicators in South Africa
The Gambia Rafik Hanna St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital Center Global Health Division May 16, 2012.
Overview of China’s health care reform Wen Chen, Ph.D., Professor Fudan School of Public Health March 21, 2016.
Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker Health of the Healthcare System: An overview.
Demands and challenges for Health Human Resources in Lithuania Liudvika Starkienė, PhD Assistant to the Minister of Health, Ministry of Health of the Republic.
© Plan International Xu Jian, Country Health Advisor, Plan China Piloting Children’s Medical Insurance in Rural China: The Experience of Plan China.
Pennsylvania Hospital Trends,
Non-Communicable Disease Prevention & Control in Afghanistan
Presented by: Vernice Davis Anthony President and CEO
Faith-Based Community Partnerships
Mt Graham Regional Medical Center Community Health Needs Assessment
1Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ 08854
Pediatric Surgery Starship Children’s Hospital Auckland, New Zealand
AWAY ROTATION, LA PAZ, BOLIVIA
Public Health Center Roosevelt Institute at Yale
Unit for Medical Systems and Devices at Ministry of Health
NCDs and Healthcare System in China
Non-Communicable Diseases Risk Factors Survey in Georgia
Why Do Some Places Face Health Challenges?
Non Communicable Diseases State of Qatar
An Experience in Global Health: Primary Care and Social Medicine in Córdoba, Argentina Tara K. Iyer1 1Medical Student, Class of 2017, Rutgers Robert Wood.
5th Coordination Meeting Agenda University of Donja Gorica
Reproductive Health in Quito, Ecuador
DEMOGRAPHICS NOTES.
University of Limerick Graduate Entry Medical School
Lithuanian Health Profile
Healthcare Delivery System
Azerbaijan Health Profile
Tbilisi Oncodipensary - Tbilisi Cancer Center
China 2010 UNGASS Country Progress Report
§ EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION OF SENIOR HOSPITAL PHYSICIANS Brussels 2018.
Lithuanian Health Profile
Oncology Market Forecast
Availability and Prices of Generic Medicines in the Private Sector.

Inequalities in Health and Health Care Provision UK
Epidemiology of Tuberculosis in Hong Kong
Component 1: Introduction to Health Care and Public Health in the U.S.
Health Insurance in New Zealand
Presentation transcript:

Shanghai Jiaotong University 9th People's Hospital Summer Global Health Experience  Augustus Chang and Raymond Cai       Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ 08854 Introduction Shanghai Jiaotong University 9th People's Hospital was founded in 1920 and currently serves the Baoshan District of Shanghai, China with 1000 inpatient bed and 33 clinical departments. Over the past summer, we performed clinical rotations through the Oncology and Plastic Surgery Departments, and gained a clinical understanding as well as increased insight into the cultural and socioeconomic factors that engender health care delivery in global contexts. Program Information This summer experience was sponsored by Rutgers RWJMS Office of Global Health, Rutgers Cancer Institute of NJ, Rutgers GAIA and Shanghai Jiaotong University. We each performed a 6 week rotation in our respective departments in Oncology and Plastic Surgery. We had the opportunity to shadow inpatient and outpatient services, scrub in for surgical procedures, conduct collaborative research with medical students and faculty, and participate in educational lectures which were conducted bilingually in Chinese and English. We also had the opportunity to electively shadow in different clinical departments of our interest. As a capstone of our summer experiences, we both prepared a lecture regarding an individual research topic of interest, which we presented to the medical students and doctors in our department. Summary of Trip Having the opportunity for a global health experience in Shanghai, China allowed us to gain additional clinical exposure and practice Medical Mandarin, as well as understand the challenges of healthcare delivery in a global context. We gained insight into the unique epidemiological challenges that China faces due to its immense population and scarce resources, especially in regards to access and affordability of healthcare. While China purportedly has near universal health insurance coverage, there are different tiers of coverage depending on location of residence, which results in inequities in care for vulnerable populations such as migrant workers. For example, while genetic screening of tumors is widely available in Shanghai hospitals, due an independent Chinese FDA approval process for medications, many oral targeted therapies are either legally imported into the country, at high cost, or illegally procured as generics on the black market. Understanding the difficulties that patients and doctors face in overcoming these barriers in providing care is integral to becoming culturally competent, patient centered physicians both globally and at home. Background The Shanghai municipality of China is an extremely densely populated city with about 24 million people living in a 2.4 thousand square mile area. The average annual salary of each citizen is the equivalent of $16,600 USD, the 3rd highest per capita GDP in the county. Most of the citizens of the city speak Mandarin; however, there is a sizable portion of the population that also speaks the local dialect, Shanghainese and a smaller portion that speaks the dialects of neighbouring districts. [1,2] In 2000, Shanghai implemented several health reforms to match the explosive growth of the city. The government allocated 70-80 RMB (11-13 USD) per capita for health care spending, a threefold increase compared to the national 25 RMB (~4 USD). By 2010, Shanghai was able to reduce the rate of avoidable mortality (defined as deaths that could have been prevented with good quality healthcare and current medical technology) from 72% down to 50%. [3] References: [1] "Shanghai Population 2016." - World Population Review. N.p., 26 Oct. 2016. Web. [2] "National Data." National Bureau of Statistics. N.p., n.d. [3] Ren, Yuan. "Health Improvements for a Healthy Shanghai Rising Comment on "Shanghai Rising: Health Improvements as Measured by Avoidable Mortality since 2000"" International Journal of Health Policy and Management 4.3 (2015): 189-90. [4] "The World Factbook: CHINA." Central Intelligence Agency. Central Intelligence Agency, n.d. Web. Sponsors Rutgers Global Advance of International Affairs Rutgers Office of Global Health Statistics About Health in China [4] - Healthcare Expenditure: 5.5% of GDP - Physician Density: 1.49/1000 people - Life Expectancy: 75.5 years Male: 73.5 years Female: 77.9 years - Infant Mortality Rate: 12.2/1000 births Male: 12.2/1000 births Female: 12.4/1000 births - Obesity Prevalence: 7.3% of population