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Sinovac und Sinopharm - Ansteckungen und Tote nach vollständiger Impfung – wirken Chinas Impfstoffe wirklich?
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Zweifel in Asien – Wirken Chinas Impfstoffe richtig?
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GURUGRAM, India, June 9, 2021 /PRNewswire/
Demand for health tech is expected to increase as the population of Indonesia gets more tech savvy and shifts from traditional methods to modern health tech services.
Entry of international health tech players into the Indonesian market is expected to drive the demand further, as the government begins to promote health tech services and thus, the market becomes more organized.
Increasing Demand for Doctors: The demand for General Practitioners, Specialized Doctors and other healthcare practitioners has increased over the years on these platforms. Supporting this trend, domestic platforms are partnering with more no. of doctors to provide availability of doctors across their platforms for the end users. As the spending budget of hospitals and clinics increases, it is expected that more healthcare IT solutions providers will enter the market, driving the demand. This will also ensure high increase in revenues in the
3 January 2021
Author: Liam Gammon, ANU
How do you oversee one of the world’s worst outbreaks of COVID-19, ram through unpopular economic reforms during a recession and end up retaining the sort of approval ratings most democratic leaders would walk across coals for? Ask Indonesian President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo, who according to most rules of political gravity ought to have had a tough 2020. Instead, what stood out in Indonesia’s pandemic year was the resilience of the political status quo amid an ‘endless first wave’ of COVID-19.
Indonesia’s decentralised government, large informal economy, high rates of smoking and non-communicable disease, and under-resourced health care system meant that the country was going to be highly vulnerable to COVID-19 no matter who was in charge. But Indonesia has performed worse than many countries at similar levels of development, due in no small part to a government response that was focussed more on politics than public health.