Go to main content
 
Speech by CE at Our Hong Kong Foundation Hong Kong Health Systems Summit (English only) (with photos/video)
******************************************************************************************
     Following is the speech by the Chief Executive, Mrs Carrie Lam, at the Hong Kong Health Systems Summit organised by Our Hong Kong Foundation today (November 30):
 
Mr Tung (Chairman of the Our Hong Kong Foundation, Mr Tung Chee Hwa), E K (Director of the Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Professor Yeoh Eng-kiong), Eva (Executive Director of the Our Hong Kong Foundation, Mrs Eva Cheng), distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,
 
     I am delighted to be here today to take part in the Our Hong Kong Foundation Health Systems Summit, and witness the launching of the Foundation's health policy research report. I remember on a previous occasion of speaking at the Foundation's release of a research report on ageing, which apparently was also done by E K. I commended the Foundation on its high productivity in producing quality research papers, and confessed the challenge it poses to me in just reading all those comprehensive reports, let alone responding through policy measures. But today is perhaps an exception – Hong Kong's health system has been very close to my heart, and as an advocate of primary healthcare since the 1990s, I am pleased that I am able to give the research team led by my good friend, E K, a solid policy response this afternoon. What we as a community need is passion and conviction in primary healthcare for us to strive ahead in order to rekindle hope for a quality healthcare service in Hong Kong.
 
     Before I continue, let me first congratulate E K again and his team for their hard work and dedication in producing this "Fit For Purpose" healthcare report for Hong Kong. As a renowned clinician, former chief executive of the Hospital Authority and health minister, E K knows better than a lot of people that Hong Kong's healthcare system has reached a stage that sustainability is at risk and resources alone are unlikely to be a panacea. It is with that same concern in mind that I laid out in my 2018 Policy Address a healthcare blueprint running into 28 paragraphs of over 2 400 words. I put primary healthcare at the beginning of that blueprint and announced a government commitment to enhancing district-based primary healthcare services. Indeed, in my speech in the Legislative Council to introduce my Policy Address, I mentioned the resolve to actively promote primary healthcare services to change the present treatment-oriented healthcare system as an example of the Government acting swiftly and boldly on matters which clearly serve the public purpose. Also, expenditure on preventive medical care is often quoted by me as an example of my new fiscal philosophy, that is, making timely investments on preventive measures in order to reduce the extra expenditure which may have to be incurred if action is delayed.
 
     Unfortunately, actions to move Hong Kong towards a primary care-led, integrated, person-centred healthcare system that would adequately meet the healthcare needs of our people, as now advocated and substantially justified by the research team, has been delayed, not by a few years, but by almost three decades.
 
     In the late 1980s, in anticipation of the setting up of the Hospital Authority to improve hospital services, critics already pointed out that even with better managed hospitals, a hospital-based approach to the delivery of health services was not in the best interest of the community. The imbalance in our healthcare system, in resource allocation and in general emphasis, had to be addressed. Riding on the International Conference on Primary Health Care held at Alma-Ata in 1978, many countries responded positively to the conference declaration that primary healthcare is the key to achieving the target of "Health for All by the Year 2000". Hong Kong was no exception. A Working Party on Primary Health Care was established in August 1989 under the chairmanship of a very distinguished medical professor, Professor Rosie Young, and a report entitled "Health For all – The Way Ahead" was published in December 1990.
 
     I found some time out of my extremely hectic schedule over the last few days to re-read parts of the Report, which I in my then capacity as Secretary to the Working Party, helped to prepare. I asked myself what has changed in our healthcare system over these past three decades. It is gratifying to note that Hong Kong’s life expectancy at birth has improved considerably from 74.4 years for males and 79.9 years for females in 1988 to 81.3 years for males and 87.3 years for females, from lagging behind Japan to overtaking Japan. The specialties of family medicine and community medicine have been given due recognition and quality training has been put in place under the Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. New preventive services like the Student Health Service, Well Women Clinics and screening for certain diseases have been introduced. Public health has been significantly strengthened as a result of a series of disease outbreaks and we can now look to the Centre for Health Protection as the vanguard of public safety. Medical vouchers have been introduced for the elderly to help them meet private medical costs. As a result of all these initiatives over the years, government expenditure on primary healthcare has increased both in terms of absolute amount and as a percentage of the total healthcare expenditure – from about 10 per cent in the late 1980s to the present 15 per cent.
 
     But the then lamented healthcare scene persists – the concept of primary healthcare as the base of a healthcare system on which rest the more expensive and more specialised medical services has not received adequate attention; its role as the "gatekeeper" of the hospital by managing patients whose medical conditions do not necessarily require hospital investigation or treatment, has not been fully appreciated; comprehensive care is not prominent and continuity of care is inadequately maintained; "doctor-hopping" remains common, and some say has been made worse by our medical voucher scheme, and our public hospitals are increasingly overburdened.
 
     Against that background, recommendations in Our Hong Kong Foundation’s health system research seem deja vu. Yet this piece of detailed research has, I hope, given our healthcare professions and the community at large, the urgency for action. The research team points out that:
 
- nearly half of the hospital admissions are ambulatory care sensitive, that is, they are chronic conditions that do not require hospitalisation if prompt and effective ambulatory or primary care is available;

- the unplanned admissions rate within 30 days of discharge from hospital is 20 per cent, indicating inadequate support for discharged patients; and

- for every HK$1 invested into community care, we could save HK$8.4 on acute care costs.
 
     At the WHO Global Conference on Primary Health Care in October 2018, the Astana Declaration on Primary Health Care was promulgated. It clearly spells out the essential components of primary healthcare, including the responsibilities of governments and societies in prioritising, promoting and protecting people's health and well-being, at both population and individual levels, through strong health systems. To achieve this mission, we need to provide enabling and health-conducive environments where individuals and communities are empowered and engaged in maintaining and enhancing their health and well-being, with partners and stakeholders aligned to provide effective support to health policies, strategies and plans. But the mere fact of the issue of this 2018 Declaration to remind all governments perhaps reflects that the 1978 Alma-Ata target of Health For All by the year 2000 has been sadly missed.
 
     In its report in 1990, the Working Party on Primary Health Care acknowledged that full development of primary healthcare programme is a long-term process. While the principles of primary healthcare are known, the question is how to put them into practice. The Working Party then recommended a gradual, step-by-step approach. Today, faced with a rapidly ageing population imposing huge care demands, growing aspirations from the public for better service, advances in medical technology making hospital treatment more sophisticated and more costly, and medical manpower facing various constraints, I do not think we have the luxury to progress only incrementally. What we need is a paradigm shift in how the community approaches healthcare, and how the government organises health services. What we need now is passion, conviction and determination.
 
     I hope the health section in my 2018 Policy Address and related Policy Agenda has displayed that passion, conviction and government commitment to promoting primary healthcare.
 
     First, I am committed to enhancing district-based primary healthcare services which I believe is the key to the right direction. The Food and Health Bureau is now setting up the first District Health Centre in Kwai Tsing District as I proposed in my Policy Address last year, with a view to starting operation around the third quarter of next year. Operating through district-based medical-social collaboration and public-private partnership, the District Health Centre will provide a range of services in health promotion, health assessment, chronic disease management, community rehabilitation, hence putting emphasis on all levels of prevention.
 
     Second, we envisage that the District Health Centre will be a service hub that provides services through a network of convenient locations, as we fully acknowledge that convenience and accessibility are of great importance to the public. The District Health Centre will form a government-subsidised service network engaging medical and healthcare practitioners in the district, which aims to incentivise targeted citizens to identify and manage health issues at an early stage. Chronic diseases and rehabilitation process can in turn be better managed with the help of healthcare services providers in the community.
 
     Third, instead of the usual step-by-step approach of waiting for the outcome of the Kwai Tsing pilot before rolling out such District Health Centres to other districts, I have already authorised the Secretary for Food and Health, as well as the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, to proactively take forward the setting up of District Health Centres in other districts. We have already identified suitable locations for the District Health Centre in Kwun Tong and Eastern Districts and are actively exploring suitable sites in the remaining districts.
 
     Fourth, we should never forget non-communicable diseases, which is the top killer in Hong Kong. With a view to improving the health of the public and mitigating the burden brought by non-communicable diseases, the Government has taken the lead to develop a comprehensive strategy and action plan for the prevention and control of such diseases, entitled "Towards 2025: Strategy and Action Plan to Prevent and Control Non-communicable Diseases in Hong Kong" with nine local targets, in May this year. To achieve these targets by 2025, new strategic directions are adopted to accelerate the actions on the diseases reduction agenda. The Government will demonstrate leadership in many ways by working with stakeholders, such as by implementing health promotion interventions and fostering effective partnerships with primary care professionals.
 
     Finally, we will take the timely step to incorporate Chinese medicine into the healthcare system in Hong Kong. Given the long history and popular use of Chinese medicine among the local community, it has a lot of potential to assume a more prominent role, particularly in health promotion and disease prevention as well as support for discharged patients. For this, we are pushing ahead with Hong Kong's first Chinese medicine hospital. Expected to commence operation by phases from late 2024, it will be our flagship Chinese medicine institution offering a combination of in- and out-patient services, and will act as a platform for Chinese medicine training, education and research.
 
     In pursuing all the above initiatives we need concerted efforts by all healthcare professionals. We have to strengthen cross-sector collaboration as well as public private partnership. We have to innovate and embrace technology, the potential of which has been clearly demonstrated by two editions of the Gerontech Expo, held this year and last year. In playing a leading role in the healthcare transformation, my Government will listen to experts' opinions and receive continuous feedback. So, ladies and gentlemen, let's join hands to develop for Hong Kong a healthcare system that is fit for all and fit for purpose.
 
     Thank you very much.
 
Ends/Friday, November 30, 2018
Issued at HKT 19:22
NNNN
Today's Press Releases  

Photo

The Chief Executive, Mrs Carrie Lam, speaks at the Hong Kong Health Systems Summit organised by the Our Hong Kong Foundation this afternoon (November 30).
The Chief Executive, Mrs Carrie Lam, attended the Hong Kong Health Systems Summit organised by the Our Hong Kong Foundation (OHKF) this afternoon (November 30). Photo shows Mrs Lam (fourth left); the Chairman of the OHKF, Mr Tung Chee Hwa (centre); the Director of the Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Professor Yeoh Eng-kiong (fourth right); the Executive Director of the OHKF, Mrs Eva Cheng (first left); and other guests.

Audio / Video

CE attends Our Hong Kong Foundation Hong Kong Health Systems Summit