Home YiGe App: A Mobile Assistant for Clinical Physicians Files IPO Prospectus

YiGe App: A Mobile Assistant for Clinical Physicians Files IPO Prospectus

Jun 06, 2016 14:42 CST Updated 14:42

On June 5, the Beijing Medical Forum and the Pharmaceutical Internet Innovation Forum of the 2016 International Summit on Pharmacotherapy for Cardiovascular Diseases (CTSC) were held at the Sofitel Hotel in Beijing. At the conference, Shanghai Yige Network Technology Co., Ltd. launched “Yige” APP, a product designed for physicians to address clinical challenges and enhance clinical practice.

 

QQ图片20160606102428.jpg

Guest Group Photo


Tang Dekai, CEO of Yige, believes that enhancing the clinical proficiency of the majority of physicians, amplifying the value of high-quality medical resources, and expanding the volume of such resources may constitute an effective approach.

 

The launch of Yige is precisely based on this consideration.

 

Tang Dekai introduced that, with the assistance of Yige, physicians can conveniently raise clinical questions, engage in peer discussions, and receive commentary from authoritative medical experts, thereby broadening their pathways to resolving clinical issues. For junior physicians and those practicing in primary care and community settings, their inquiries are answered by industry experts, which helps support their clinical work and improve diagnostic and treatment standards, fulfilling the mission to “develop mobile health products that solve real-world problems.”

 

To enable more physicians to access advanced diagnostic and therapeutic expertise from renowned hospitals and leading specialists, Yige has invited distinguished experts from prestigious medical institutions to develop content such as clinical pathways, guidelines, and case analyses. Physicians can study experts’ clinical experience and diagnostic reasoning in the “Clinical” section of Yige, participate in thematic discussions, and engage in face-to-face exchanges with these experts.

 

It is reported that Yige currently focuses primarily on cardiovascular and endocrine specialties, having assembled a substantial pool of medical experts and physicians.

 

Next, YiGe will be officially launched into the market, enabling more physicians to address complex clinical challenges and learn advanced clinical expertise from specialists through the platform.

 

Wang Fang, Deputy Director of the Department of Cardiology at Beijing Hospital, also pointed out that the “pain points” addressed by many current mobile health products are not sufficiently compelling. Physicians face numerous challenges in participating, including low utilization rates and limited enthusiasm. Moreover, compared to senior physicians, the returns on using such products are not yet significant. Nevertheless, doctors remain hopeful about mobile health solutions, aspiring to leverage these tools to maximize their professional value. Wang Fang emphasized that given physicians’ extremely limited time, mobile health products should be designed around their fundamental needs to genuinely and effectively serve both doctors and patients.