Category Archives: Medical Tourism/Health Tourism

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Medical Tourism Conference hosted at Thumbay Hospital

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Dubai : “UAE presently ranked 16th as a preferred destination for Medical Tourism,has the potential to be in top five says expert. There may be new demand trends for treatments and destinations in medical travel. However there are untapped niche … Continue reading

Health, Tourism and Turkey

Our weekly program promotes a wide variety of services offered as part of medical tourism in Turkey. Today we will introduce you Rize province, a coastal city along the Black Sea and in the Eastern Black Sea Region.

TurkeyCT30nov2014

Rize is a province having an epic natural beauty in the northeast of Turkey. It is a place where nature has been bountiful, with steep hills, emerald green valleys and numerous creeks. It is possible to observe hundreds of hues of the colour green in the city thanks to the fact that it has the highest rate of rainfall among Turkish provinces. Forestry is a major source of income for its residents, for it has numerous forest areas.

It is imperative to talk about tea when we speak of Rize province. Because Rize is the first thing that comes to mind when the subject is tea. About 65 percent of all tea grown is Turkey is produced in Rize.

Rize is also a province mentioned in the context of alternative tourism recently. Kaçkar Mountains is one of the best known tourist attractions in the province.

Kaçkar Mountains, falling inside the provincial borders of both Rize and Artvin, offer several alternatives to tourists who visit the region. Visitors could engage themselves in various sports branches in these mountains that rise above the Black Sea coast, ranging from trekking to rock climbing and from rafting to skiing. One of the 200 ecological areas around the world, Kaçkar Mountains were designated a national park in 19994. Kaçkars are so steep along the coast, you can even sit on the coastline and watch this gigantic 400-metre high mountain range. Besides its fascinating view, Kaçkar Mountains are also home to several rare plants and wildlife, found only in the valleys of this national park.

It is the only place in Turkey where rhododendrons survive at an altitude of 3000 metres. Other animals such as roe-deer, wild goat, marten, Caucasian black grouse and Caucasian Salamander also live in the national park.

One of the world’s largest glacier lakes above the altitude of 3000 metres, the Great Sea Lake is another wonder of nature on Kaçkar Mountains. Ice formed at the cold depths of the Lake, go up the surface and then create large chunks of ice blocks.

During winter months, these ice blocks thicken and cover the entire surface of the Lake and cut off the Lake’s connection with the area. The thickness of the ice is 5 metres in some places. Melting at the Lake, which is covered with ice for a total 10 months, begins in the last week of July. But even then, the Lake is under a 2-cm thick ice.

We should also note that diving is performed in the Great Sea Lake. Those interested in this sport say that underwater world is quite different in this lake and that it is possible to observe different life systems there.

One of the best known plateaus of Rize province is Ayder Plateau and it is also home to Rize’s most important thermal source. Visitors could reach Ayder Hot Springs in Çamlıhemşin district of Rize province, via a mountain route.

Thermal and radioactive waters of the hot springs, issue from a depth of 260 metres at a temperature of 50 degrees Celsius. Ayder waters benefit patients suffering from a number of ailments such as stomach, bowel, kidney and rheumatic diseases, when they are used as complementary treatment. But there are some conditions which will make it inconvenient for people to benefit from the waters; such as some illnesses where the patient is bleeding, high blood pressure and heart conditions. Ayder Hot Springs could be unhealthy for people suffering from these conditions. For this reason, it is essential that visitors consult with a doctor before visiting the hot springs.

You really don’t have to have a health issue to visit Ayder Plateau.

The region offers a lot to its visitors with its natural beauties. You can enjoy some solitude in the nature and go for long walks, benefit from Kaçkars’ oxygen- rich environment and familiarize yourself with the local culture that is Kaçkar plateau culture.

Located 30 km from Rize province, Andon Mineral Spring is another source of health in the area.

Andon waters, rich in carbon dioxide, iron, alkaline and  bicarbonate, are known to be used in the complementary treatment of liver,
gall bladder, stomach and bowel diseases. Gout patients and overweight people could also benefit from regular drinking cures of Andon waters.

source: http://www.cbsport.com / CB Sport / Home> Health / Editor: Perkasen / 17 Kasim 2014 Pazartesi  (November 17th, 2014)

 

University Hospitals receives $5 million gift to transform travel medicine services, research

The Roe Green Center for Travel Medicine, named after a Lyndhurst philanthropist, will use a $5 million gift to expand research support, launch an annual lecture series on emerging global health problems and develop tele-consultation capacity for travel and international diseases, among other initiatives. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

The Roe Green Center for Travel Medicine, named after a Lyndhurst philanthropist, will use a $5 million gift to expand research support, launch an annual lecture series on emerging global health problems and develop tele-consultation capacity for travel and international diseases, among other initiatives. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Cleveland , Ohio  :

A $5 million gift from a local philanthropist is being used to establish the Roe Green Center for Travel Medicine at University Hospitals. The donation by Green, a Lyndhurst woman who has provided significant funding to a variety of local causes for years, will help transform UH’s travel medicine clinics.

UH’s travel clinics , at UH Case Medical Center, and the UH Chagrin Highlands and UH Westlake health centers, provide pre-travel preventive care and education, and diagnosis and treatment for ill travelers upon their return. The gift will allow UH to begin planning for a future clinic at UH Ahuja Health Center in Beachwood, replacing the Orange Village location.

The gift also will support research, an annual lecture series on emerging global health problems, and telemedicine.

When UH’s travel clinic first opened in 1972, it was the first of its kind in the United States. Roughly 150 people sought medical services in that first year, said Dr. Robert Salata, chief of infectious diseases at UH Case Medical Center and professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. Today, the number of annual visits is close to 4,500, he said.

What sets UH apart from other travel clinics is its multiple locations, physicians on staff, research, and that it provides pediatric care through UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital, and care to foreign visitors and immigrants, Salata said.

The number of international tourist arrivals worldwide reached a record 1.087 billion in 2013, an increase of 5 percent over 2012, according to the United Nations World Tourism Organization.

By 2030, that number will reach 1.8 billion; UNWTO projects that travel to emerging destinations – places like Vietnam, Central and South America and Sub-Saharan Africa – will grow at twice the rate as travel to regions with advanced economies.

While the deadly Ebola virus has pushed the issue of safe international  travel in the forefront, it’s mosquito-borne illnesses such as malaria and Chikungunya  – the latter of which in recent years has begun to flourish in the Carribean, Latin America and the southern U.S. – that are much bigger threats to more travelers, Salata said. There is no treatment available for Chikungunya, the symptoms of which include severe joint pain and arthritis that can last for several months.

“Only about 40 percent of folks are seeking pre-travel advice about the risks and preventive medications,” Salata said. With more people visiting foreign countries – including more elderly people, pregnant women and people with underlying medical conditions – more attention needs to be paid to preventive care, he said.

Roe Green

Roe Green

Green has provided substantial support to various causes, among them the performing arts, Kent State University and a Chardon-based shelter and counseling service.

This latest gift, Green concedes, is a bit “out of the box” for her.

“I love to travel,” said Green, who began traveling overseas as a teenager with her parents, and who has been to more than 160 countries. Now in her 60s, she stops by UH’s East side clinic before every trip. “To me, the best education you can get is through traveling.”

As part of Green’s wish for the Cleveland area to develop a reputation as a center for information on international infectious diseases, “I’d like to see more people do research on more of these rare diseases,” she said.

To that end, part of the grant will be dedicated to supporting the work of individual physician-investigators in the area of travel medicine and international infectious diseases – strengthening the ongoing work being done at UH Case Medical Center and CWRU, which ranks fifth in the nation in National Institutes of Health funding for infectious disease research.

“We envision putting aside money on an annual basis on what we call pilot research funding,” Salata said. “I think this really will allow us to develop something special.”

source: http://www.cleveland.com / Home / by Angela Townsend, The Plain Dealer / November 17th, 2014

E. Europe embrace medical tourism

Budapest , Hungary  :

Surgical assistant Otilia Florescu thought she’d never come home seven years ago, when she left Romania for a better-paying job in Italy.

Now she’s planning a return, to serve the foreigners flooding in for dental work, plastic surgery and other elective procedures — for half the cost in their home countries, or less. The growing medical tourism industry, which produces about $250 million in annual revenue for Romania, gives Florescu a way to rejoin her family without paying a financial price.

“I have Italian friends who had their teeth fixed or CT scans done in Romania because it’s much cheaper and the services are good,” Florescu said during a recent vacation in Bistrita, northern Romania. “The higher number of private clinics in Romania is great news.”

Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Serbia and Hungary, among the worst-hit in Europe by the economic crisis that started in 2008, are investing in clean and efficient clinics to lure western Europeans and Americans for medical procedures that aren’t covered by insurance. The strategy in an area where joblessness is as high as 20 percent may help stanch a flow of medical personnel to the richer west.

“A developed private sector that offers appropriate remuneration could prevent the drain of doctors, which is a big and generalized problem in central and eastern Europe,” said Dan Bucsa, a London-based economist at UniCredit Bank. “The losses in the public health-care sector could be minimized if doctors stayed, and this would also help the economy.”

The region’s hospital nurses, dentists, surgeons and other specialists are being lured abroad by private-sector health care offering better pay and conditions, even 25 years after Communism began to crumble. More than 70 percent of health-care workers in Romania are government employees; for Croatia it’s 90 percent.

Since Romania joined the European Union in 2007, about 25,000 doctors and 15,000 nurses and assistants have moved for employment in Germany, France, Spain and Italy, according to the Health Ministry. They are benefiting from EU rules permitting free movement of labor inside the union, even as their own countries struggle to replace them.

“The tendency of health professionals to locate and practice in urban areas due to better living and working conditions is a challenge for policy makers worldwide,” the World Health Organization said in a report last year.

Romania has one of the lowest physician density ratios in the region, with 22.7 doctors per 10,000 people, below an EU average of more than 35, according to WHO data from 2009 and 2010. In neighboring Hungary, the ratio is 30.3 and for Croatia, it stands at 26. Germany’s density level, by contrast, is 36, while Austria has 48.5 doctors per 10,000 people.

In Croatia, the EU’s newest member, about 500 doctors have asked the national medical chamber for papers needed to practice abroad in the year since it joined the bloc in July 2013. Bulgaria, which joined in 2007, has lost 400 physicians so far this year, after 600 left in 2013.

The average wage for an experienced Romanian doctor is less than $20,000 a year, according to the statistics agency. That compares with about $82,000 in Germany and $120,000 in Britain, according to the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, using figures adjusted for the cost of living.

Romania may lure some doctors back should it decide to grant fiscal incentives similar to those offered to software engineers, who don’t pay a 16 percent income tax, according to Ruxandra Tarlescu, a senior manager at PricewaterhouseCoopers in Bucharest.

“Offering tax incentives could be a solution to limit the doctors’ drain to other countries and help stabilize the medical system,” Tarlescu said in an interview in Bucharest.

The government hasn’t said whether it plans such incentives. It has approved this year a tax-free monthly scholarship to all resident doctors of 670 lei ($188).

Croatia’s government has a special Cabinet post to oversee medical tourism, with an eye to luring personnel home. Assistant Health Minister Miljenko Bura, who runs the Institute for Health Tourism, says such visitors account for about 1.5 percent of the country’s $8.8 billion in annual revenue. His goal is to raise the share to 5 percent.

“With proper planning and the development of services, we can bring our doctors back,” Bura said in a phone interview. “Croatia’s natural beauties, the advanced technology at our private clinics and the high quality of our doctors give the country a high potential for health tourism.”

Alyce Dolphin, who lives near Dubuque, Iowa, has already reaped the benefits. She made two 10,000-mile round trips to Zeljko Popadic’s private dental clinic in Rovinj, on Croatia’s sunny Adriatic coastline, to get implants and prosthetics that she says would have cost $45,000 at home.

“I would do it again in a heartbeat,” the 64-year-old organist said in an interview, just after one of her last visits to the clinic, a five-minute walk from Rovinj’s harbor with its bobbing fishing boats and yachts. “I’ve got a new smile and a vacation for me and my family for about half the price I’d pay at home.”

That includes airfare and lodging for both trips, the last of which included her husband, her daughter and a visit to Venice. The dental procedures alone cost one-third of what she would have paid in Iowa, she said.

Popadic, who has run the clinic since 1997, says foreign patients can “help stop the exodus to other EU countries.” He himself had been considering moving to South Africa before deciding to open his own place. Foreigners make up 40 percent of his patients — and 80 percent of his revenue, he said.

It’s not just Croatia that’s cheaper. The average cost of a dental crown in a Bulgarian clinic is 185 euros ($230), according to BG Denta clinic in Sofia. That compare with as much as 600 euros in Ireland, where many of the clinic’s patients come from. Dental implants cost 1,100 euros in Bulgaria, compared with at least 2,000 euros in Ireland.

Eastern European clinics advertise breast or dental implants, fertility treatments and spa packages on popular worldwide shopping websites including Amazon.com. Many multi- language websites, such as treatmentabroad.com, seek to help patients choose a clinic abroad.

The number of Romania’s medical tourists, mostly Germans, Italians, Israelis and Britons, may double by the end of 2015 and reach about 500,000 “if the planned medical infrastructure work is done,” said Andrei Nacea, managing director at Seytour, a Bucharest-based agency specializing in the industry.

In Hungary, the government has awarded state subsidies worth $76 million in the industry since 2012, including development of wellness and spa facilities, dentistry and ophthalmology. Last year, 2 million foreign visitors came to Hungary to use health services, including thermal-bath therapy. They came mostly from Austria and Germany, but also from the Netherlands and neighboring Slovakia, Poland and the Czech Republic, according to the statistics office.

Florescu, the Romanian expat surgical assistant, said that when she first began working in health care in Romania, “wages were a disgrace.” Hospitals in her home country, the second- poorest in the EU, routinely asked patients to bring their own medicines, while the sick often paid bribes for better service.

After three years, she left to work at a private hospital in Rome. With the number of private hospitals in Romania doubling to more than 110 since then, she’s already started applying for jobs. While her salary in Romania even at a private clinic won’t match the 1,600 euros per month she earns in Italy, lower living expenses and rent will offset the drop, she said.

_ Kuzmanovic reported from Zagreb, Croatia. Contributors: Gordana Filipovic in Belgrade and Elizabeth Konstantinova in Sofia.

Iskandar Malaysia to have at least 25 hospitals

Nusajaya  :

More foreigners, especially from Singapore, are expected to come to Iskandar Malaysia to seek medical treatment with the setting-up of at least 25 hospitals, including private specialists centres by 2016.

One of the health industry members involved – IHH Healthcare Bhd – has invested over RM400mil for the first phase of its Gleneagles Medini Hospital here.

Its CEO and managing director Dr Tan See Leng said that the 300-bed hospital, which is set to open its doors to the public by June next year, would have an initial capacity of 148 beds

“With the setting up of the hospital right at the heart of the Iskandar region here, we hope to attract foreigners, especially Singaporeans to seek medical treatment at our hospital.

“The rates will be relatively cheaper for Singaporeans to get medical treatment in Johor Baru compared to what they will be paying in the republic,” he said yesterday after the topping-up ceremony of the construction of the first phase of the hospital building.

It was also attended by Johor Health and Environment committee chairman Datuk Ayub Rahmat.

Dr Tan said other than Singaporeans, the company was also targeting middle-class Indonesians visitors.

“GMH will offer a comprehensive range of medical facilities, including cardiology, ear, nose and throat, obstetrics and gynaecology, oncology, ophthalmology and orthopaedics.

“A total of 138 medical suites will be leased for specialists who wish to set up their own clinics and practices within the hospital premises,” he added.

Dr Tan, who is also the group CEO and MD of Parkway Pantai Ltd, IHH’s largest operating subsidiary, added that the company was also set to open a Gleneagles hospital in Kota Kinabalu next year.

Meanwhile, Ayub said that the Johor government hoped that the new Gleneagles Medini hospital would help boost the state’s medical tourism activites.

“The Iskandar region will see development of some 25 government and private hospitals by 2016, in line with our focus to build a medical hub within the region here.

“Plans to construct two more government hospital, namely Hospital Sultanah Aminah II and Hospital Pasir Gudang, are also on track,” he added.

source: http://www.thestar.com.my /  The Star Online / Home> News> Nation / Sunday – November 06th, 2014