SHANGHAI: To meet the need for high-end healthcare services among foreign 
communities and wealthy people in the Yangtze River Delta areas, the 
construction of a joint-ventured Sino-German Friendship Hospital will begin 
later this year in Shanghai International Medical Zone. 
Tongji University (TJ) in Shanghai yesterday reached an agreement with two 
German investors: Siemens Project Venture GmbH (SPV) under Siemens AG and 
Asklepios Kliniken, a major private hospital operator in Europe. The three sides 
signed a memorandum of understanding for jointly funding and building the 
hospital during President Hu Jintao's state visit to Germany last November. 
"The rapid economic development in China has brought up much need for 
high-end medical service, which is especially reflected by the World Expo 2010," 
Vice-Mayor Yang Xiaodu said during the signing ceremony. 
The Sino-German Friendship Hospital will see a total investment of 1.5 
billion yuan (US$190 million). Located in Shanghai International Medical Zone in 
Nanhui District of the city, the hospital will have an overall construction area 
of 84,000 square metres and 1,000 beds, providing all major fields of health 
care services. 
Last year's statistics show that more than 60,000 foreigners are working or 
studying in Shanghai, with another 200,000 visiting the city each year. However, 
many foreigners have to seek medical services in their home countries or fly to 
Hong Kong or Singapore because the service, technology and management of 
hospitals in the city still lag behind those in developed countries. 
The Sino-German Friendship Hospital is considering this potential market in 
Shanghai and its surrounding areas. The hospital will serve as a major medical 
institution for international visitors for the World Expo, the city's largest 
international event in 2010. By the end of 2008, the first phase of the hospital 
will be completed with 500 beds, 21 outpatient centres and specialties, and four 
medical technology centres. 
As an affiliated hospital to TJ, the hospital said it will introduce a 
leading hospital management concept and hire staff from China and abroad. 
"Thirty per cent of the hospital's medical staff will be recruited from 
overseas, and Chinese doctors and nurses will have an opportunity of studying in 
Germany for one or two years," said Professor Dong Qi, Tongji's assistant 
president. 
Dong said that the hospital will be listed in the medical insurance system of 
Germany or other European countries, thus solving the medical assurance problem 
for expatriates in China. Besides health care service, the institute will be 
built into a medical education and research centre for life science. 
(China Daily 04/10/2006 page2) 
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