Category Archives: Health /Medical Treatment For Overseas Treatment

Thailand wooing Bahrain tourists

BAHRAINIS can now get 90-day visas on arrival in Thailand as part of efforts to promote medical tourism.

It has tripled the length of stay allowed to citizens of all Gulf countries, who can take advantage of the new rule as long as they show medical reports and proof of an appointment in one of the country’s hospitals.

“Thailand wants to be Asia’s medical hub and in the past the length of stay was inconveniently short so the government decided to extend it to not more than 90 days from 30 days currently,” said a Thai government spokeswoman.

The announcement comes only months after Thailand Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra visited Bahrain along with a delegation of 60 businessmen to promote medical tourism.

During the trip, which coincided with the 35th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Thailand and Bahrain, she revealed Thailand was expected to welcome 21 million visitors this year, up from 19m last year, which itself was a 20 per cent rise from 2010.

The Asian country receives around 650,000 tourists from the Middle East each year, most of who go there on holiday or for medical treatment.

More than 20,000 of these come from Bahrain.

source: http://www.gulf-daily-news.com / Gulf Daily News, Bahrain / Home> Local News / Sunday, August 12th, 2012

‘Kolkata has potential to become medical tourism hub’

Kolkata, AUGUST 13:

Kolkata has potential to be developed as a major medical tourism destination in South Asia, Debashis Sen, Principal Secretary of the Urban Development Department, West Bengal, said.

“There is great possibility of turning Kolkata into a health tourism hub for South East Asian countries, Bangladesh and Nepal, with the rapidly growing healthcare infrastructure in the city,” Sen said. He was addressing the inauguration of exhibition and conference on healthcare infrastructure and construction industry, organised by Confederation of Indian Industry here.

According to him, the State Government has allotted land to a few such upcoming ventures including Chittaranjan National Cancer Institute, Shankara Nethralaya, a global organ transplant hospital and certain other speciality hospitals at Rajarhat New Town.

Sen added that Tata Memorial Centre for cancer research has already come up at Rajarhat as one of the major healthcare facilities and that a hospital for cardiac patients is under construction. Land has also been allotted for the development of a trauma care centre and school of paramedical science, he said.

EXHIBITION

The four-day CII exposition, “Nirmaan and HealthInfra 2012”, will remain closed on August 17. According to a CII spokesperson, nearly 50 exhibitors in healthcare space will showcase their products and services – infrastructure and equipment – at the exhibition. It will also have an ‘architect’s gallery’ representing works of various architects from Kolkata.

source: http://www.TheHinduBusinessLine.com / Home> News> Travel / by The Hindu Bureau / August 13th, 2012

Tourism and good health: Medical tourism

by Dr. Peter Tarlow, President of Tourism & More, Inc.,

Tourism and health has taken on two new meanings. Health tourism can be broken down into two components, people who travel to a particular spot for medical reasons, such as cancer centers or for specific operations such a coronary bypass, and people who travel to a location for medicinal reasons such as rest and relaxation. Medicinal tourism caters not to the sick but to those who seek new levels of wellness. Examples of medicinal tourism are spa or centers that cater to non-essential cosmetic re-makes such a weight loss. Medical tourism of the hospital variety differs from medicinal tourism (the spa variety) in that it aims to serve those who are accompanying an ill person and often does not seek repeat business. Medicinal tourism on the other hand seeks repeat business and hopes that its clients will return on a regular basis.

Spa tourism has been around for thousands of years. In ancient times places such as northern Israel and Rome attracted visitors from the much of the known world. Across the millennia then spa tourism has provided visitors with non-invasive therapies, opportunities to improve physical fitness. In the modern world spas also provide their guests with weight-loss treatments, special cleansing diets and a variety of mineral and thermal skin treatments. Many spas also often massage and yoga classes as other ways to improve health and to de-stress.

Both of these separate phenomena are often classified as “medical tourism” and although their raisons d’être are very different, they also share many tourism similarities. Medical tourism also has the added advantage that it can provide essential services to the local population at the same time that it is helping the local economy. To help you consider if medical tourism is a good choice for your community consider some of the following ideas.

-Determine what health factors make your community unique. Saleable health factors can include exceptionally clean air, unique waters with minerals, quiet settings, or any other natural phenomenon that would provide the person with a form of health benefits that are unique to your community.

-Make sure that your medical personnel understand the importance of good bedside manner. In the world of medical tourism physicians, nurses, and therapists are more than medical professionals. They are also part of the tourism industry and their patients are also “clients”. That means that it is imperative to train medical tourism workers not only in their particular medical field, but also provide them with a clear understanding of customer service and the tourism product. How they treat their patients may well determine a patient’s willingness to return.

Merge your tourism offerings with the local ambiance. Medical tourism is about creating psychological and physical harmony. Make sure to offer a wide variety of options, but at the same time, be careful to honor the place in which your tourism is located and integrate local culture and foods into your medical tourism site.

Make your hospitals tourism friendly. Hospitals are often seen as places in which to get sick rather than to get well. Hospital tourism means integrating not only the patient with the local community but also the whole family. During the patient’s recovery phase, provide the patient’s family with day trips that stay connected to the hospital in case of emergency. Develop special brochures for out-of-towners who are visiting sick friends and relatives. Remember that these are people who are in your community due to a love one’s illness. They need excellent customer service, ways to relieve tension and still feel that they are close to loved ones.

Make sure that your medical tourism meets industry standards. Medical tourism is in an existential sense different from many other forms of tourism in that involves the health and well-being of a guest. Make sure to meet all standards, do not advertise what you cannot deliver and make sure that people understand the risks involved. The bottom line is that while foreseeability is essential in all forms of tourism it is especially important in the area of medical tourism.

Take the time to get your medical tourism right! Terms such as medical tourism, spa tourism and wellness tourism are often used so loosely that no one is sure what these terms mean. Be truthful in your advertizing; say what you offer and what you do not offer so that the customer is absolutely clear about the experience s/he is purchasing. Also be certain that resources, such as water, (as used in spas) are tested on a regular basis so as not to turn a medicinal tourism experience into an illness acquired experience.

If doing medical tourism; make sure that you create partner agencies. One of the problems in the area of medical tourism is what does a patient do after s/he has returned home and has a problem. Good medical tourism centers can provide 24 hour/7 day a week medical hot lines, but often a patient needs more than a phone. Make sure that medical records are sent home in the local language or in a language that the local doctor can read. Establish partner hospitals around the world and make sure that medical prescriptions can be filled in the customer’s country.

Deal with the insurance problems before not after. Many visitors in both medical and medicinal tourism may want to use a local insurance plan. Be sure to list in your literature payment structures and whose insurance your institutions can accept. There is nothing less pleasant than having a fight over money when it comes to health and these disputes often cause visitors to have a negative reaction to the host community and not just the health provider. Make sure that health providers understand that they are an essential part of the community’s economic health and what they do or fail to do reflects on the whole community.

Source: tourismandmore.com
source: http://www.eturbonews.com / eTN  Global Travel Industry News   / Special to eTN / July 31st, 2012

Longer UK Wait Lists Create More Medical Tourists

More medical tourists from the U.K. may be forced to go outside the country for cataract surgeries, weight loss surgery, and hip and knee operations.

Nearly all of U.K.’s health care regions have purposely made waiting lists longer by restricting the number of procedures they perform.

9 out of 10 National Health Service Trusts said they have placed limits on many procedures they perform, making longer waiting lists for these procedures.

These growing waiting lists were recently was exposed through a “freedom of information” request in the U.K.

Non-urgent rationing encourages medical travel

The NHS Trusts claim they have reduced the number of these surgeries because they need to save money. By labeling these essential treatments as “non-urgent” or “of low clinical value,” they are able to divert financial resources to more urgent care needs.

Whenever financial resources are taken away from a group of treatments, patients turn to  medical tourism to provide options in other countries.

British Health Minister Simon Burns was forced to respond to the news, stating that rationing treatment on grounds of cost was “totally unacceptable” and decisions to treat patients should be made on clinical grounds alone.

At the same time, Burns acknowledged decisions need to be made to limit or reduce certain types of treatment. This will help improve the bottom lines of budgets, re-allocate manpower or re-purpose physical space.

The NHS must find £20 billion (about US$30 billion) worth of efficiency savings by 2015 while it is still staggering from a failed central computer project that has ended up costing over £12 billion (almost $19 billion).

Canada makes wait times public

In Canada, the province of Ontario maintains a website that publicly lists the wait times not only for surgery but also for diagnostic imaging or emergency room care. Wait list information is searchable by procedure, hospital name or location.

The Ontario list is remarkably similar to that of the U.K. – listing procedures more in demand in aging populations.

Currently, reducing wait times for hip and knee replacements, cataract surgery, radiation oncology and cardiac services are a priority for the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, reducing the need for medical travel.

But weight loss surgery in Ontario has a wait list of 3 years, and is not included in the public list – apparently not an immediate concern of the Ontario government. Weight loss surgery travel by Canadians will continue.

Bed shortages

A different shortage, of patient beds, is the justification for another practice in the U.K. that was also recently made known.

UK doctors are putting tens of thousands of elderly hospital patients to death prematurely because they are difficult to manage or to free up beds, contends Professor Patrick Pullicino, a consultant neurologist and professor of clinical neurosciences.

Denying care to elderly

Speaking to the Royal Society of Medicine in London, he described a “death pathway,” known as the Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP), as a treatment protocol approved by the NHS and National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence.

LCP, a method of looking after terminally ill patients, is used in hospitals across the U.K., and may include withdrawal of treatment including all nourishment and water. On average, LCP leads to death within 3 days.

Similar protocols exist in the U.S., Canada and other countries, for withdrawing treatment from terminally ill patients who are often in hospice and have very little time left to live. Nourishment and all medical treatment are withdrawn, and high levels of pain medication, often morphine, is given.

Pullicino said doctors had turned the use of this controversial ‘death pathway,’ meant for use when doctors believe when death is imminent, into the equivalent of euthanasia of the elderly. He claims it has become an assisted death pathway rather than a care pathway.

There are around 450,000 deaths in Britain each year of people who are in hospital or under NHS care. Around 29 per cent – 130,000 – are of patients who were on the LCP.

source: http://www.mtqua.org / Medical Travel Quality Alliance / by Julie Munro / July 22nd, 2012

Russians come Turkey for medical tourism as well

Turkey will soon be in high demand by Russia and Ukraine for the nation’s medical tourism options. Dr. Yahya Öztel, the owner of Turmed, a firm operating in medical tourism in Russia and Ukraine states that Turkey will soon become a very popular destination for medical tourism. Öztel explains that ever since attending last year’s Anfaş Hetex medical tourism fair in Antalya, they have already begun bringing patients to Turkey. “Unfortunately the health system in Ukraine is not highly subsidized therefore Ukrainian doctors do not always have the necessary modern technology or equipment to diagnose or treat patients. Therefore, I believe that the foundation we established during the meetings held at the Anfaş Hetex Fair will provide strong commercial ties in order to increase medical tourism in Turkey for Russia and Ukraine.”

Last year’s Anfaş Hetex, Turkey’s first and sole medical tourism fair, has already begun to reap fruit. Mustafa Çalık the Executive Board Chairman of Anfaş Fairs explains that they have held the Anfaş Hetex Fair for three years now in order to support the health and medical tourism industry which has begun to grow in Turkey. Explaining that every year approximately 1,000 people come to Turkey for medical tourism, Çalık states: “Medical tourism and medical-based trips fall into three categories; thermal and spa-wellness tourism, older age and handicapped tourism and medical tourism. With the Anfaş Hetex Fair we bring together all establishments and facilities with operations in each subcategory with international professional visitors. With an approximate five percent share of the 100 billion dollar global medical tourism market, Turkey receives 1.5 to two billion dollars. It is thought that with Turkey’s geographical advantages, human resources and medical experience, this figure could increase.”

Özel Medical Park Antalya Hospital Complex Chief Physician Dr. Şerif Köksal explains that the Anfaş Hetex Fair has resulted in a number of business collaborations which has helped bring in patients to Turkey from throughout the world. “We admit cancer or organ transplant patients from Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan practically every week.”
Anfaş Hetex Fair Director Arzu Yüngül announces that this year’s Anfaş Hetex 4th International Medical Tourism Fair, which will be held November 1-3, 2010 at the Antalya Expo Center, will have over 100 firms participating and is expected to result in 2,000 business meetings.

source: http://www.portturkey.com  / Friday, July 20th, 2012