“kyojin hopes for synergy in development, which is an essential component of health.” u bin, member of the national political consultative council and head of the central office of the 93rd institute, recommended that the results of the examination of the regional medical institutions be promoted from “underline mutual recognition” to “online sharing” to explore replicable and replicable “kyojin's experience” for national medical institutions' information-sharing。

Commissioner oh bin addressed the panel (right). A reporter for the beijing daily news
U bin said that in terms of mutual recognition of the results of examinations at medical institutions, in recent years the kyouta region has been actively explored. To date, 104 clinical tests have been carried out under 3,326 medical institutions and 50 medical video files under 686 medical institutions。
“the identification of institutions and projects for mutual recognition, the effective reduction of duplication of examinations and the simplification of access to health care have been widely welcomed. It should be noted, however, that today, in the depths of information and networking, where mutual recognition is based mainly on paper reports or palettes, there is an urgent need to accelerate `online' access and mutual recognition.” u bin suggested strengthening the top-level design, led by the national commission for health and health, in collaboration with the government of kyojin, to build a “kyojin regional health information synergies platform”, which would serve as a unified hub for gathering, storing, exchanging and authorized access to the results of inspections in the region, as well as to identify long-term financial security and long-term operational mechanisms for platform-building, mobility upgrades。
“to adopt a `pilot-first-line, batch-access, step-by-step' strategy, to increase financial investment, to create a dedicated fund to bridge the `digital divide' and to ensure that all levels of health care are `accessible, accessible and useful'.” “achieving online sharing, harmonizing data standards, and breaking the barriers to information interaction are the top priorities”, said wu bin. Wu bin said that three uniform standards should be developed for checking data information, particularly for image information, harmonizing image storage and transmission standards to ensure image quality and mutual recognition. The harmonization of standards ensures the compatibility and interoperability of data among health-care institutions in the region, providing a solid basis for automatic machine reading, smart matching and real-time sharing。
In addition, u bin suggested improving the regulatory system, guaranteeing data security and patient privacy, promoting the application of techniques such as privacy computing, block chains, exploring “data availability” sharing models and achieving data compliance flows and value mining while ensuring privacy and safety of patients。




