Jane Chen / Shanghai Daily news
On low-key debuts, privately operated hospitals are introducing membership
schemes to attract economically successful patients, according to today's
Shanghai Morning Post.
Paying a yearly club fee varying from 3,000 yuan
(US$371) to nearly 60,000 yuan, the members can enjoy discounts on medical bills
as well as free medical checks and customized services.
The fees range
between 3,000 yuan to 8,000 yuan at a newly opened hospital on Hongqiao Road,
while surging to 58,888 yuan at a male patient-exclusive hospital on Lujiabang
Road, the Shanghai Morning Post said. The Shanghai-based newspaper doesn't
specify the names of the hospitals, however.
The latter institution, not yet
opened, is targeted at high-income patients, the hospital's general manager said
as quoted in the report on the condition of anonymity.
So far, the club
scheme seems successful, having attracted some tens of members, mostly
entrepreneurs or white-collar workers, he disclosed.
A female-exclusive
hospital on Chang'an Road is also offering such membership. The fees are lower
because, most females earn less than their male counterparts, the president said
as cited by Shanghai Morning Post.
Part of the customized services, members
can give a phone call to discuss their health problems, he said.
Despite
their confidence as shown on the membership schemes, hospitals prefer to open
the new service first to existing patients than make public promotions, in the
hope that the hefty membership fees won't deter ordinary patients.
Industry
insiders seem cautious about the market outlook, regarding the schemes as simply
a sales method of the hospitals.
"Regardless of sales methods, good medical
technologies and convenient services are most essential to their business
successes," Zhou Pu pointed out. Zhou is Office Dean of International Medicare
Center of Shanghai No. 1 People's Hospital.