MIRDC Silver Winner of 2026 Edison Awards MagicABC

Source: Republic of China Taiwan

MIRDC has received a prestigious Silver Award at 2026 Edison Awards for its groundbreaking innovation, and the innovative technology is MagicABC. The award-winning technology is an AI-Guided Interactive Speech-Language Therapy System, and it aims to help children with speech delays.

Taiwan is facing a shortage of Chinese speech-language pathologists, which limits the amount of clinical therapy available for children with speech delays. To address this challenge, MIRDC has developed MagicABC, an innovative speech-language therapy software designed to help alleviate the shortage of Chinese speech-language pathologists in Taiwan.

Most speech-language therapy software offers one-way therapy. MagicABC integrates Chinese clinical data into Speech-Language Pathologist-Agent, embedding a virtual speech therapist into games. Through two-way communication and instant feedback, it breaks the limits of traditional one-way therapy.

Furthermore, the software introduces three major innovations. First, it integrates interactive guidance, speech recognition, and text-to-speech to create a dynamic feedback cueing mechanism that simulates common therapeutic prompting techniques based on user responses. Second, it features AI-driven therapeutic guidance. The software combines clinical and general corpora with in-context learning to dynamically adjust dialogues according to context and learning progress. Third, the software applies Natural Language Processing (NLP) to evaluate language abilities in semantics, syntax, and pragmatic, and then generating personalized learning reports.

For applications, MIRDC has partnered with more than 10 medical and educational institutions, and 81% of cases show improvements in language comprehension and verbal expression. In the future, the software will expand into applications such as aphasia rehabilitation, special education, home-based rehabilitation, and cross-language training, with the goal of building a sustainable intelligent speech therapy ecosystem.

Rural by-election set for May 17

Source: Hong Kong Information Services

The Home Affairs Department today appealed to eligible registered electors to vote this Sunday in the Sha Lo Tung Cheung Uk, Kam Tsin Wai Tsuen, Wa Shan Tsuen and Yung Shue Ha Indigenous Inhabitant Representative Elections, and the Lin Fa Tei Resident Representative Election.

Nineteen Rural Representative vacancies are open in the by-election, and 19 valid nominations were received during the nomination period.

Two candidates are running for Indigenous Inhabitant Representative posts on each of the following committees: the Tai Po Rural Committee in Sha Lo Tung Cheung Uk; the Pat Heung Rural Committee in Kam Tsin Wai Tsuen; the Sheung Shui District Rural Committee in Wa Shan Tsuen; and the Lamma Island (South) Rural Committee in Yung Shue Ha. Two candidates are also running for a Resident Representative post on the Pat Heung Rural Committee in Lin Fa Tei.

Polling will be held for these five vacancies.

The other nine candidates were returned uncontested. These are the candidates to be Indigenous Inhabitant Representatives of Ha Yeung, Tai Po Mei, Kat O, Ma Wan Main Street and San Tong Po, and the candidates to be Resident Representatives of Sheung Ling Pei, Shek Pik San Tsuen, Wo Liu Hang and Sha Tau Kok Market (West Lower).

No valid nominations were received for the remaining five vacancies, including the Indigenous Inhabitant Representative vacancy at Kwan Mun Hau, and the Resident Representative vacancies at Shan Pui Chung Hau (I), Shui Tin Tsuen, Tai Po and Tap Mun.

Polling will be held from noon to 7pm.

The department reminded electors to bring along their original identity documents, or other specific alternative documents, to the polling station as specified in the polling notice.

Light housing leads to better life

Source: Hong Kong Information Services

The Housing Bureau announced that the latest quarterly Composite Waiting Time for Subsidised Rental Housing is 4.7 years, marking the lowest level in over eight years. Secretary for Housing Winnie Ho noted it is also the first time that the waiting time has dropped below five years.

“We are confident that within this term of Government, the Composite Waiting Time would be capped at five years.”

As the Government strives to fulfil low-income families’ housing needs, about 9,650 Light Public Housing (LPH) units have been fully occupied as at the first quarter of 2026, while 20,150 units will be completed in the remainder of 2026, gradually moving towards the target of completing the construction of 30,000 LPH units by 2027-28.

Better living

Ms Zhuang and her son, who moved into an LPH unit in Kai Tak last year, are two of the citizens who benefit from the LPH policy. She previously rented a subdivided flat in To Kwa Wan, where conditions and hygiene were far from ideal. With the extra space at the new home, they can spend more time together and are in a happier living situation.

“Since moving into LPH, my son’s concentration has improved, and his attention deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms have eased thanks to the better living environment.”

Total solution

In the first quarter of 2026, about 8,400 general applicants have been housed to public rental housing (PRH) or LPH. Around 47% of them were housed to LPH units. Notably, the waiting time for PRH units in urban districts was about six years, while that for LPH units in the New Territories was only about two years.

Ms Ho said LPH provides a total solution for those stuck in poor living conditions, and urged families in need to consider moving into the extended urban areas, such as Tuen Mun, as years of poor living conditions may take a great toll on the young.

“The four-year difference means if you have a child in primary one, a six-year-old, within four years, he is already a 10-year-old.

“Four years in a very poor living condition without the confidence to interact or talk to other people will affect him for the rest of his life.

“When I see children move into LPH, they have more open space to play. They have this neighbourhood, friendship.”

Moreover, she pointed out that moving into LPH, as compared with renting subdivided units, is a financially advantageous option for families in need.

“On average, each family can save $5,500 per month.”

For less financial burden, a better family relationship and improved living conditions, households in need should look at LPH as a much better option, the housing chief advised.

Speech by FS at PolyU DBA 30th Anniversary Dinner (English only)

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

Following is the speech by the Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) Doctor of Business Administration (DBA) 30th Anniversary Dinner today (May 14):

Professor Jinguang Teng (President of PolyU, Professor Teng Jinguang), Professor Edwin Cheng (Dean of the Faculty of Business of PolyU), DBA alumni and students, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

Good evening. It is a pleasure to be here tonight to celebrate the 30th anniversary of PolyU’s DBA programme. Founded in 1996, it was the first of its kind in Hong Kong – and it remains to this day the largest DBA community in this city and across the Mainland.

Building a community of scholar-leaders over three decades is no small feat. My warmest congratulations to everyone who has contributed to this achievement.

A DBA programme is an endeavour to bridge rigorous research with real-world practice, translating ideas into decisions that move businesses and societies forward. Tonight’s theme – “From Ideas to Impact” – perfectly captures the spirit that has defined this programme from the very beginning.

I am particularly pleased to see that tonight’s panel will explore how AI and Web3 are turning ideas into business and societal impact, with a focus spanning supply chain management, digital asset infrastructure and robotics. The breadth of that agenda reflects the true scope of the transformation before us – and it is a transformation we must confront with the utmost attention.

Technology and business transformation

Let’s take a moment to reflect on how technology and innovation have transformed business and commerce.

Back to 1996 – the year this programme was born. The Internet was in its infancy. A mobile phone was the size of a water bottle. Data was a scarce resource. Business strategy was often about optimising within known boundaries: how to produce more efficiently, distribute more widely, price more competitively.

What we have witnessed since then is not incremental improvement, but the rewriting of the grammar of commerce. Consider these: we used to buy a CD; now we stream. We used to purchase software; now we subscribe. We used to own the things we relied on; but increasingly, ownership has evolved into a greater emphasis on getting access. Products have become platforms.

And value is no longer created solely within individual companies; it emerges across ecosystems, where capital, talent and data flow across organisational boundaries supported by interoperable systems, digitalisation and sophisticated logistics.

Profound challenges of AI era

Today, we have entered the age of AI – a moment more far-reaching and more disruptive than anything that came before. The challenge is no longer simply about adopting new tools. It is about recalibrating the way we think – and doing so with urgency.

First, AI is compressing the distance between insight and action. A strategist might once have spent months analysing market data before moving, but an AI agent today monitors market sentiment in real time, simulates scenarios and recommends courses of action or even has them executed – all at once. The bottleneck is no longer information, but our ability to direct machines with precision, and to verify and act on what they present.

Second, AI is redrawing the architecture of value chains. Middle layers that were justified by their ability to co-ordinate and process, are being compressed. At the same time, new intermediary roles are emerging – data curators, model trainers, compliance architects. I suspect many of you are quietly asking yourselves: in the new organisational structures that are taking shape, where do I stand? Will I still sit at a node that adds value?

For Hong Kong, these shifts carry particular weight. As an international financial centre and a super connector, our competitive edge has long rested on intermediation – in capital, information, markets and talent. AI will challenge each of these roles. But it also gives us the opportunity to reinvent ourselves and move forward.

Opportunities we must seize together

This brings me to the core message I want to leave with you tonight. The opportunities ahead are enormous – but they will not materialise on their own. They require purposeful, co-ordinated action among the Government, business and academia. I want to highlight three areas where our collective leadership can make a decisive difference.

First, the digital workforce. The conversation about AI and jobs tends to focus on displacement – on what AI will take away. But that is only one side of the story. The more important question is what AI makes possible. Businesses need digital employees to scale what they do. Employees need digital assistants to keep them focused on what they do best. AI agents, if deployed well, can become a genuine extension of both. They can absorb the repetitive, the routine and the administrative, so that human energy can be directed to where it matters most: judgement, relationships and creative problem-solving.

But none of this works if the gains stay at the top. When AI doubles what a team can produce, the people who made that possible need to feel it – in their salaries, in their roles, in their prospects. That is how a virtuous cycle begins. Companies that share the gains through new skills, new responsibilities and better rewards will not just outperform their peers. They will be the ones that attract and keep the best people.

Second, the human-machine relationship. In the future, much of the information that companies produce – press releases, annual reports, regulatory filings, even research papers – may be written, processed and read primarily by AI systems, with humans as the secondary audience. When machines become the primary intermediaries of information between organisations, what matters is not just what you communicate, but whether your systems can communicate with theirs. Interoperability becomes the new baseline requirement.

But alongside that shift comes an equally important truth: distinctly human skills – curation, verification, ethical judgement – become more valuable, not less, precisely because they are what machines cannot be trusted to do alone. The question is whether our institutions, our training systems and our own habits can adapt quickly enough to ride on this development.

Third, AI literacy. We must treat AI literacy as a societal imperative. In this year’s Budget, we outlined significant investment in computing infrastructure, the AI+ strategy and providing AI Training for All. But government effort alone will not be enough. We need a coalition of employers, educational institutions, professional bodies, business chambers and trade unions to build AI capability at every level of the workforce.

The history of technology tells us that the fruits of innovation tend to concentrate before they spread – accruing first to innovators and those who own capital, and reaching workers and communities only much later. The steam era followed that pattern. So did the early Internet. AI presents us with a rare opportunity to do better because it can empower even the ordinary people.

When a small business owner can deploy a digital agent to handle customer enquiries around the clock; when a nurse can spend less time on paperwork and more time at the bedside; when a teacher can tailor lessons to every student in the classroom – that is the moment productivity becomes prosperity. That is the transformation towards which we should build.

Concluding remarks

Ladies and gentlemen, 30 years ago, PolyU had the foresight to create a programme that would turn experienced executives into scholar-leaders – people who think critically, research rigorously and act decisively. That foresight is worth more today than it has ever been. The world does not lack ideas. What it often needs is the capacity to turn ideas into impact – to move from concept to execution, from pilot to scale, and from individual achievement to collective progress.

Tonight is therefore both a celebration and a call to action. A celebration of what this programme and its remarkable community have built across three decades; and a call to all of us to ensure that the transformation underway is pursued with ambition, guided by responsibility and designed to benefit the many, not just the few.

That is the future worth building – together.

Thank you very much.

Ends/Thursday, May 14, 2026
Issued at HKT 20:00
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Tuen Mun Hospital announces a sentinel event

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

Tuen Mun Hospital announces a sentinel event 
     A 75-year-old male patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and hyperlipidemia was admitted to a medical and geriatric ward in TMH on May 6 due to an exacerbation of COPD. He was diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome complicated by myocardial infarction and was arranged to undergo for Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) on May 11.
      
     During the procedure, coronary angiogram revealed an air bubble in the patient’s artery. The clinical team immediately checked the blood pressure monitoring device and other connected equipment. No abnormality was detected. The patient’s condition remained stable and the clinical team proceeded with the procedure after clinical assessment, with close monitoring of the equipment and the patient’s condition. After about 30 minutes, multiple air bubbles were detected again in patient’s artery. The patient subsequently developed bradycardia and hypotension. Resuscitation was initiated immediately. The patient continued to deteriorate and succumbed on the same day.
      
     Upon initial inspection of the procedure and the used equipment, clinical team identified an abnormality in the luer lock connector of an extension tube. In general, catheters, connectors and related devices used in PCI procedures should be airtight to prevent micro air emboli entering the bloodstream.
      
     The hospital was saddened by the passing away of the patient. TMH team has interviewed with the patient’s family to explain the incident and express deepest condolence. The hospital will maintain close communication with the family and offer possible assistance.
      
     The incident has been reported to the Hospital Authority Head Office (HAHO) via the Advance Incident Reporting System. A Root Cause Analysis Panel is set up to look into the incident. The scope of the investigation will include the related equipment, procedures, operations and other possible contributing factors. A report with proposed recommendations will be submitted to the HAHO within eight weeks. The incident has been reported to the concerned manufacturer of the equipment and the Department of Health for follow-up. The incident has also been reported to the Coroner for follow-up.
 
     Membership of the panel is as follows:Dr Carmen Chan
Deputy Chief of Service (Medicine), Queen Mary Hospital
 
Members:
Ms Chi Chui-yee
Department Operations Manager (Medicine and Geriatrics), Tuen Mun Hospital
 
Dr Raymond Cheung
Chief Manager (Patient Safety and Risk Management), Hospital Authority
 
Dr Tam Li-wah
Chief of Service (Medicine and Geriatrics), Kwong Wah Hospital / Tung Wah Group Of Hospitals Wong Tai Sin Hospital
 
Dr Wong Chi-wing
Consultant (Medicine and Geriatrics), Pok Oi Hospital / Tin Shui Wai Hospital
 
Mr Bill Wang
Vice-Chairman, Hong Kong Kidney Foundation
 
Ms Gigi Yiu
Nurse Consultant (Cardiac Care), New Territories East Cluster
Issued at HKT 20:10

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Summer highlight blending arts and education: International Arts Carnival tickets go on sale from May 15

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

Summer highlight blending arts and education: International Arts Carnival tickets go on sale from May 15 ——————————————————————-
     The opening programme, “Starchitects” by the UK’s Motionhouse, is an acrobatic theatre production themed around space exploration. Combining advanced technology with digital projection, anti-gravity choreography and aerial acrobatics, it presents a fantastical outer-space journey on stage. The work, which won the Best Family Arts Activity award at the Fantastic for Families Awards 2023 in the UK, will be staged in Hong Kong for the first time from July 10 to 12 this year.—————————————————
     Aracaladanza from Spain will present its production “PLAY”, blending quirky visuals with contemporary dance and ballet: Bubble-wrap swans dance “Swan Lake”, oversized pillows spark a “mega battle”, and giant floral ropes create ever-changing patterns, delivering surprise after surprise. The production has won multiple awards at Spain’s MAX Awards and has received widespread acclaim.
 
     For toddlers aged 1 to 3, Canada’s Théâtre Motus will present the interactive theatre “Tree”. With dynamic lighting, puppetry and live music, it creates a warm and cosy “nest” space where toddlers can explore freely and interact with the performers, enjoying their first taste of the arts. 
     Carrot Productions from the UK will present a music-and-film programme, “Fantastic Fairy Tales”, featuring original music that brings “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” to life, alongside an animated adaptation of David Litchfield’s award-winning illustrated book “The Bear and the Piano”, offering a heartwarming concert-and-screening experience.——————————————–
     Renowned nanyin master Yuen Siu-fai, Artistic Director of the One Table Two Chairs Charitable Foundation, will take the lead in the nanyin theatre production “Siu Hei’s Musical Journey: Poetry in Nanyin”, in which audiences will experience a blend of nanyin and Tang poetry. “The Man in the Ceiling”, based on the work of a Pulitzer Prize winner, will be brought to life by Musical Dreams Theatrical’s finest Hong Kong musical theatre talents, who will sing of passion and the pursuit of dreams. The Yip’s Children’s Choir will present a new interpretation of the children’s opera “Alice in Wonderland – Reimagined through the Looking Glass”, blending bel canto with children’s voices to capture the values of the story.————————————–
     IAC partners with the registered charity First Initiative Foundation and Hong Kong’s long-established bakery brand Garden to present an interactive art exhibition and community picnics at the East Kowloon Cultural Centre and Yuen Long Theatre, bringing arts into the community. The theatre foyers will be transformed into spaces for “Picnic and Play”, where participants will receive picnic packs and enjoy a harmonica experience led by a world harmonica champion, Gordon Lee. Interactive art installations inspired by this year’s IAC, created by local artists Soilworm and moon.noon, also welcome families to explore.——————————————
     Other highlights include:      In addition to stage performances, there will be a fine selection of films from around the world under the Summer Family Cine Fest by the Film Programmes Office. The Hong Kong Public Libraries will host the Summer Library Festival. The IAC also offers a range of parent-child workshops, an online programme and an exhibition for the whole family to enjoy.
 
     Tickets for the IAC (except for certain programmes) will be available at URBTIX (www.urbtix.hk 
     For enquiries on programmes and ticketing, please call 2370 1044 or visit its website at 
www.hkiac.gov.hkIssued at HKT 12:50

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Government issues “Letters of Offer” to Wang Fuk Court owners

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

Government issues “Letters of Offer” to Wang Fuk Court owners 
     A Government spokesperson said, “After the announcement of the long-term plan, the Housing Bureau has been taking forward the acquisition work at full speed. The Engagement Team has reached out to owners of the eight blocks to explain the details of the plan and answer their enquiries. The Housing Bureau is also concurrently working on the drafting of the necessary legal documents, with a view to expediting the overall process and assisting affected residents in rebuilding their homes. The Government’s acquisition offer provides a range of options, allowing owners to make the most suitable choice based on their own circumstances and needs.”
 
     “Upon receipt of the owners’ duly signed ‘Letter of Acceptance’, the Government will make every effort to promptly assist in completing the Agreement for Sale and Purchase and the Assignment, taking into account the circumstances of each case. In particular, for owners who opt for cash payment, the Government will expedite the disbursement of funds upon completion of the transaction, enabling them to immediately make purchase arrangements in the private market or the secondary market of subsidised sale flats, or alternatively to participate in the subsequent Special Sales Exercise dedicated for Wang Fuk Court owners to acquire a new subsidised sale flat either by cash or under the ‘Flat-for-Flat’ arrangement,” the spokesperson said.
 
     The company, Wang Fuk Court Property Rights Acquisition Limited, established by the Government and wholly owned through the Financial Secretary Incorporated for the purpose of acquiring ownership of Wang Fuk Court, will send “Letters of Offer” by registered mail to the correspondence addresses provided by Wang Fuk Court owners, or deliver the letters in the manner requested by them.
 
     Any owner who has not received the “Letter of Offer” by May 22, or has not previously provided contact details to the Engagement Team, may call the enquiry hotline for the Wang Fuk Court long-term housing arrangement plan at 2129 8133. The Government will follow up as soon as possible.
 
     If the owners accept the acquisition offer, regardless of which option is chosen, they must return the duly completed and signed “Letter of Acceptance” enclosed with the “Letter of Offer” and return it to Wang Fuk Court Property Rights Acquisition Limited by using the enclosed return envelope (or other means as specified in the “Letter of Offer”) on or before August 31, 2026.
 
     As regards Wang Chi House, if three-quarters (75 per cent) or more of Wang Chi House owners sign the “Letter of Acceptance” on or before June 30, confirming their intention to sell, the long-term plan made by the Government will be formally available to Wang Chi House. Otherwise, the plan will not cover Wang Chi House. For owners who do not sign by June 30, 2026, but later decide to sell, they must also sign the “Letter of Acceptance” on or before August 31, 2026.
 
     To encourage owners to accept the acquisition offer at an early stage, the flat selection priority under the Special Sales Exercise will be determined in batches according to the date on which the duly signed “Letter of Acceptance” from the owners is received. The deadline for the first batch is June 30, 2026, and the deadline for the second batch is August 31, 2026. The flat selection priority for applicants within the same batch will be further determined by their sequence as drawn in a ballot.
 
     If owners have any enquiries regarding the “Letter of Offer” or require assistance in understanding the content, they may contact their designated Engagement Team member directly or call the above hotline at 2129 8133. The Team is pleased to provide appropriate assistance. The owners may also visit the dedicated website for the long-term housing arrangements for Wang Fuk Court (www.hb.gov.hk/wfc/Issued at HKT 12:49

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Results of final winners of Content Development Scheme for Streaming Platforms announced

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Film Development Council (FDC):

Four final winners of the Content Development Scheme for Streaming Platforms under the Film Development Fund (FDF) have been selected. Each winner will receive a maximum of $4.5 million for the production of a pilot of their streaming series. The four final winning projects are “Kowloon Grand Hotel”, “Bus Lightyear”, “Spirited Away” and “Balikbayan Box Club”, details of which are available on the FDC’s website (www.fdc.gov.hk/common/whatson/CDSSP_result.pdf).

The Chairman of the FDC, Dr Wilfred Wong, said, “I am glad that all 10 projects under the Scheme clearly demonstrate the versatility and international perspectives of local filmmakers in developing cross-sector, cross-platform content. The four winning projects selected after keen competition have both commercial and artistic appeal. I am confident that these projects will soon win the favour of various platforms for further investment opportunities.”

The Scheme aims to nurture cross-media production teams developing works on streaming platforms and expand new distribution markets for the Hong Kong film industry by producing high-quality content.

The Scheme, having received over 50 eligible applications, recruited participating teams through a competition to develop content for a series for streaming platforms. Among the applications, 10 projects were shortlisted, and each received a script development fee of $600,000 to $1.2 million to develop a full production proposal and scripts of an entire series. The final four winners out of the 10 shortlisted projects each receive a maximum of $4.5 million to produce a pilot of the series to identify potential platform investors. Together with the script development fee, each final winning team is awarded a total of up to $5.7 million.

Temporary closure of Lei Yue Mun Park

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

     The Leisure and Cultural Services Department announced today (May 14) that Lei Yue Mun Park will be temporarily closed from June 1 to October 5 to facilitate the transfer of community isolation facilities. The site will be reverted to its original use for the reconstruction of a hard-surface playground as well as a natural turf pitch. Other improvement works will be carried out. During that period, applications for booking campsites and renting of wedding venue facilities will be suspended. 

     The aforementioned community isolation facilities were built by the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government to cope with the epidemic in 2020. The Government will retain the facilities removed from the site as far as practicable and deliver them to suitable locations for reconfiguration and reuse in a timely manner. This includes repurposing them as site offices and ancillary facilities.
 
     For enquiries, please contact the venue staff at 2568 7380.

New interface of eHealth App and publicity campaign launched

Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

     The Health Bureau (HHB) announced today (May 14) the launch of a new interface and functional enhancements for the eHealth mobile application (eHealth App) to further improve the user experience, with a view to transforming the eHealth App into an unified health management tool for all Hong Kong citizens. A publicity campaign was also launched on the same day. 

     Since its launch in 2021, the eHealth App has recorded cumulative downloads of over 4.1 million, and the average monthly login count has steadily increased in recent years, exceeding 1.2 million. Drawing on feedback from different user groups, such as patient organisations, parents and the elderly, the HHB has introduced the new enhanced interface.

     The new interface of the eHealth App features a personalised home page. Through the “My Profile” function, users can consolidate various categories of personalised health information, including a to-do list (such as appointment reminders, health programme service reminders, health management alerts and cross-boundary health record applications) and daily health management matters (such as blood pressure, heart rate, blood glucose and body measurements). The “Useful Tools” shortcuts enable users to quickly access their most frequently used features. A new “Health Journey” function is also introduced on the eHealth App to display users’ past health records and health programme details on a timeline, thereby enabling users to better monitor their health trajectory. 

     Moreover, the latest version of the eHealth App offers a “Lite Mode”, which incorporates larger fonts, clear icons and a streamlined layout, with the goal of better addressing the needs of the elderly and other users who require such accessibility features.

     Under the eHealth+ five-year development plan, the HHB continues to roll out and enhance the core functions of the eHealth App, enabling citizens to manage their health records, access health information, monitor their personal health and develop healthier lifestyles anytime and anywhere through a single one-stop platform. The key functions include: 

1. “My Health Records” – View and share electronic health records deposited by local public and private healthcare providers as well as designated medical institutions in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area. These records include medication, laboratory and radiology reports and medical certificates, covering a range of Western and Chinese medicine records. Starting from March this year, the eHealth App has introduced the “eImaging” function, allowing citizens to view radiology images directly on their mobile phones without the need to carry physical imaging reports.

2. “My Health Programmes” – Centrally manage all public health programmes and services, such as the Elderly Health Care Voucher Scheme, the Chronic Disease Co Care Scheme, and the District Health Centre services. Key functions include viewing remaining service quotas, usage details and medical records, as well as scheduling future services.

3. “Doctor Search” and “eBooking” – Search for healthcare providers and professionals by location, consultation hours, health programmes and types of electronic health records that can be deposited, and other criteria. Instant bookings can be made for services provided by the Hospital Authority, the Department of Health, the 18 Chinese Medicine Clinics cum Training and Research Centres and some private healthcare providers, enabling efficient planning for medical consultations.

4. “Cross boundary Health Record” and “Personal Folder” – Enable secure use of electronic health records across the boundary at a total of 20 medical institutions, including the University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Hospital and other medical institutions under the Elderly Health Care Voucher Greater Bay Area Pilot Scheme.

5. “eMedical Certificate” – Verify all electronic medical certificates issued by the public sector, enabling centralised management and usage of personal medical documents.

     A spokesman for the HHB said, “The launch of the brand-new interface and functions of the eHealth App will bring citizens a more personalised, smooth and convenient user experience. We will continue to deepen the seamless connectivity between eHealth and other public and private healthcare electronic platforms. By integrating citizens’ public and private medical records and developing more core functions in a progressive manner, we can fully realise eHealth’s strategic role as ‘One Digital Front Door to Empowering Tool’. This will enable citizens to manage their own and their family members’ healthcare needs more conveniently through a single and centralised platform.”

     The HHB will concurrently roll out a series of publicity activities under the theme of “eHealth: Your All-in-One Health Link”.  The HHB has produced several promotional videos for broadcast on various media platforms to introduce the new interface design and unique functions of the eHealth App. Citizens may also visit the thematic website to learn about the enhanced interface and functions. In addition, the HHB will collaborate with non-governmental organisations, secondary schools and elderly centres to launch the eHealth+ Intergeneration Pilot Programme. Under this initiative, student volunteers will serve as mentors to teach the elderly how to use the eHealth App, with a view to establishing a sustainable teaching model within the community, thereby empowering more citizens to manage their own health through eHealth.