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Raymond Zhou:
By jingo, they're mad! Op Rana:
Consumerism and politics of waste Ravi S. Narasimhan:
Lessons from SARS have to be applied Alexis Hooi:
Beyond the death and destruction A new prescription
By Roberta Lipson (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-10-29 10:03
The first time I set foot in a Chinese hospital I found my calling. My first visit to a major Beijing teaching hospital was an overwhelming experience. For me, it was not the thousands of bicycles that crowded the streets at rush hour, nor the bustling crowds at the Beijing train station that drove home the enormity of the task of modernizing this country with such a huge mass of people, but rather the scene in the lobby of the hospital. I had never seen so many people crowded into such a space before, and on the wards there were beds not only in the rooms but lining the halls, and some beds were crowded with multiple patients. This was the best the country had to offer at the time. Yet I met incredibly talented and dedicated doctors who were working with only their wits and their hands, their stethoscopes and, in the most fortunate cases, a few very old X-ray machines, microscopes, EKG units and refrigerators. It was clear to me, coming from a recent career in the medical industry in the United States, that I could be of help in this situation. So we founded our company, Chindex, with the mission of introducing appropriate technology to the medical sector, as well as a few other industry areas. Eventually the company settled on the medical sector exclusively, but in those days there were such great needs in every sector, and so few companies from abroad engaged in meeting those needs, that we were happy to help where we could. How lucky we were to find a role that helped meet some of society's greatest needs and at the same time was a sound basis on which to build a business. Together with my business partner, Elyse Silverberg, we founded Chindex in 1981. Using our life savings (which at the tender ages of 23 and 24 were pretty skimpy), we bought two typewriters, rented a hotel room in Beijing and a room in New York City, and began what sometimes felt more like a detective agency than a business. As we worked together with the Chinese foreign trade agencies (we were not allowed to have direct contact with our customers at the beginning), we had to decipher the purchase requisitions of the end users they represented, who were doctors in hospitals all over the country. These doctors picked their shopping lists from the "methods and materials" sections of research papers in journals, which were sometimes very old. The requisitions were handwritten with laboriously, sometimes inaccurately, copied English letters. Sometimes what they wanted was already obsolete, and so we had to figure out what modern product would best fill their needs. In the very early days, almost all of our business was done at the bi-annual Canton Fair, an event where business was done only with foreign trade officials. Our role was to help them find the products on the official requisitions, and then arrange for their importation. Unfortunately we didn't get immediate cooperation from the US manufacturers, as they were often wary of getting involved in business with "Red" China, suspicious of their prospective customers' ability to pay with anything but tea, and had reasonable enough concerns about how they would be able to support the products they sold. It was our job to convince these US companies that we could pay them 100 percent upfront via letters of credit, and that we were building a company in China that could do the after-sales support. Soon we hired a few engineers who we sent for training with the US manufacturers. Several far-sighted American companies became our business partners as we began to market and sell their products all over China. This became possible in the early 1980s as the government became slightly more open to direct (though still formal, government-controlled) contact between foreign suppliers and their customers.
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