The initiative aims to expand affordable primary-care access for over 200,000 residents.
Eligible individuals include recipients of the Comprehensive Social Security Assistance, residents aged 75 or above who receive the Old Age Living Allowance, those using Residential Care Service Vouchers for the Elderly and recipients of the Working Family Allowance Scheme.
Under this arrangement, the Hospital Authority’s seventy-four family-medicine clinics will set aside spots for those seeking treatment for episodic illnesses such as influenza, colds and gastroenteritis.
Quota allocations will be monitored and adjusted according to service needs across districts.
Through this targeted approach, authorities intend to relieve burden on general outpatient services and redirect resources toward vulnerable populations.
By focusing early treatment in the community setting, the scheme also aligns with Hong Kong’s broader strategy to build a stronger primary-health-care foundation.
The Health Bureau emphasised that the scheme is a pilot and will be reviewed for effectiveness before any full-scale roll-out.
Patients and clinicians will be closely monitored to assess uptake, health outcomes and resource distribution.
The pilot represents a significant step in the government’s efforts to enhance equity in health-care access for the city’s ageing and lower-income citizens.




























