Category Archives: Medical Treatment/Health Treatment Subject By Speciality

Dubai to roll out medical tourism packages

Doctors perform cosmetic surgery at the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery Hospital in Dubai / courtesy AACSH

Doctors perform cosmetic surgery at the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery Hospital in Dubai / courtesy AACSH

Dubai is preparing to roll out medical tourism packages covering procedures from sports medicine to cosmetic surgery.

Despite rapidly rising room rates across the emirate, analysts believe the city’s health offering will draw medical tourists from around the world.

From September, the Dubai Health Authority (DHA) will seek applications from hospitals in the emirate to participate in medical tourism packages which would include costs of treatment, visa, hotel stays and even recreational activities for accompanying family members.

Medical tourism, which relies on affordable quality treatment, is also dependent on ancillary services such as hotels and recreational infrastructure.

“What is important is the delivery of more mid-market and longer stay accommodation proximate to the hospitals so that patients and their carers have more of an option in terms of the accommodation available to them,” said John Podaras, a partner at Hotel Development Resources.

And these need to be patient-friendly, he says.

While Dubai is becoming more expensive for hotel guests, it is perceived as having an edge over other medical tourism destinations such as Lebanon, known as a cosmetic surgery hub, Bangkok or New Delhi, in terms of security, shopping and leisure activities.

“Dubai is counting on its brand and its additional attractions plus the relatively shorter commuting times from its core target markets,” said Mr Podaras. He believes Dubai still appears competitive when compared with more traditional medical tourism destinations such as Switzerland, Germany and the UK.

“Medical tourism is more elastic on pricing than other forms of tourism,” Mr Podaras said. “In any case, Dubai is benchmarking itself against medical destinations that are even more expensive.”

Dubai Health Care City’s first medical tourism agency agrees.

“We are targeting markets within eight hours of flying time,” said Ibrahim Abu Gharbieh, the managing director of Salamatak, a medical tourism facilitator.

The company, which started operations last month, welcomes most of its patients from Gulf countries such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Iraq, Libya and Yemen.

It has already signed up with tour operators in Sudan, Nigeria and Ukraine.

Last year, Dubai’s average room rate was US$368.22, according to Hotstats data, as compared to Dh369 in Mumbai and Dh460 in New Delhi, according to the Federation of Hotel and Restaurant Associations of India. In Beirut it was $169, according to Ernst and Young. In Bangkok, it was €64.93 (Dh326), while in Singapore room rates were €144.53, according to a survey from HRS Hotel Portal reported in the trade publication TTRWeekly.com .

Still, the number of medical tourists to Dubai has been rising despite the city becoming a more expensive option.

In 2012, an estimated 107,500 medical tourists came for treatment at Dubai’s 23 hospitals, five day surgery facilities and 1,181 clinics. The figure is growing at a compound annual growth rate of 15 per cent, said DHA in February. The top source markets include Russia, Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the UK, India and Pakistan.

And many of these tourists have expensive tastes.

“Some say pick us up from the airport, have their passports done, walk them into a first-class lounge, take them out to their hotel in a Jaguar or a BMW,” Mr Abu Gharbieh said. “You might not expect that in Bangkok, but in Dubai people demand that.”

The company is promoting IVF and cosmetic treatments.

Its nose reshaping and lip augmentation package starts at Dh6,500, but does not include visas, accommodation or transportation. Its IVF packages start at Dh32,000.

It has partnered with six hospitals, including Bourn Hall Fertility Clinic Dubai and American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery Hospital. Salamatak plans to raise that number to at least 20 by the end of the year.

Dubai is initially targeting wellness and preventive care treatment, including orthopaedic and sports medicine, plastic surgery, ophthalmology, dental procedures and full-body check-ups.

“Dubai in general is attuned to providing therapies in beauty and often quick-fix health issues such as gastric banding and liposuction,” Mr Podaras said. “The more holistic wellness approach offered by the many health retreats found in countries such as India and Thailand is not something that is particularly prevalent in Dubai.”

ssahoo@thenational.ae

source: http://www.thenational.ae / The National / Home> Business> Industry> Insights> Tourism / by Sananda Sahoo / May 18th, 2014

High end tourists looking at Sri Lanka’s Ayurveda

SriLankaCT27may2014
Sri Lanka’s Ayurveda healthcare is garnering the attention of high end tourist market. “Lately, the Japanese travel sector has shown stronger interest in Sri Lanka’s Ayurveda tourism. Last week a Japanese Member of Parliament touring Sri Lanka also has expressed of Japan’s interest in Sri Lanka’s Ayurvedic care for Japanese medical tourists” revealed  Rishad Bathiudeen (Minister of Industry and Commerce) on 16 May.
Minister Bathiudeen was addressing the simultaneous launch event of AROGYA 2014 and INTRAD 2014 at BMICH on 16 May. The twin expo is scheduled to continue through 18th May. The AROGYA series of exhibitions were introduced by the National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka in partnership with the Ministry of Health and features indigenous medicinal products and services. As for INTRAD, this year’s is the eighth in the INTRAD series. Attending the twin expo were delegations and participants from Vietnam, Thailand, India, Maldives and China. Also present on the occasion were Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa, Deputy Minister of Health Lalith Dissanayake, and Sunil Wijesinha (President National Chamber of Commerce) as well as representatives from the diplomatic community in Colombo. This is the first time that the twin events are held at once.
Since the end of conflict in 2009, Japanese tourists to Sri Lanka have doubled. In 2013, more than 31,500 Japanese tourists visited Sri Lanka. In the same year, Japan ranked 11th in arrivals to Sri Lanka as per tourists’ country of residence, immediately below USA, which ranked 10th.
“Already a Sri Lankan Ayurveda product brand has earned global reputation with its treatment centres being located in Europe. Today’s Arogya also takes place along with good news for this industry. I am given to understand that Japanese travel sector has shown stronger interest in Sri Lanka’s Ayurveda tourism. Last week a Japanese Member of Parliament touring Sri Lanka also has expressed of Japan’s interest in Sri Lanka’s Ayurvedic care for Japanese medical tourists.
Our tourism sector reported more than 1.2 million arrivals in 2013. I wish to commend the Economic Development Minister  Basil Rajapaksa for this growth” said Minister Bathiudeen and added: “Since medical tourism is at the middle of several sectors such as tourism, healthcare and inbound travel packaging, we believe that Public Private Partnerships are a good way to strengthen this promising sector so that our government’s goals in tourism related hub synergies are leveraged well. These twin events have been, gaining gradual recognition, among our business community, as successful networking events, in Colombo.  With only a per capita healthcare expenditure of $ 175, at first Sri Lanka does not appear to have an advanced healthcare infrastructure similar to the developed countries. However, this does not show us the full picture. Due to the support of well-trained, high quality healthcare professionals we are witnessing the emergence of a new sector-that is medical tourism. Studies show that around 15% of patients in Sri Lanka are foreign patients, such as from Maldives.
“I am pleased to say that two healthcare companies already have active programs for foreign medical tourists. In fact the Export Development Board under my Ministry, which is also partnering for INTRAD and Arogya, believes that medical tourism is a promising service sector to drive our foreign exchange earnings. Developing a strong identity in medical tourism in western and Ayurveda can result in a special tourism brand for Sri Lanka in the long term. I am given to understand that INTRAD is a wide ranging exhibition including industries, imports and even exports. As the Minister in charge of exports I commend your efforts to promote our exports through this series. In fact I am pleased to share the good news with you on our exports.
“In that, the encouraging news is that we have identified 16% provisional export growth in the first quarter of this year from January to March, compared to last year’s January-March exports. Accordingly this year’s first quarter provisional exports totalled $ 2.80 Bn while the comparative 2013 first quarter total exports stood at $ 2.36 Bn, showing a 15.7% quarterly growth. This year’s first quarter provisional export growths is led by fisheries, agricultural and industrial exports. The increase in provisional exports only for the month of March this year is a strong 27% from February exports. This year’s March only exports totalled to a record $ 1.06 Bn. These strong growth rates are reported at a time when we target national exports goal of $ 20 Bn by 2020 under the committed vision of  President Mahinda Rajapaksa.} Minister Bathiudeen said.
Several international participants at the expo expressed that for them, Sri Lanka is a new opening. “Coming here from Vietnam for the first time, we did not know that Sri Lanka market has big such potential for our line of products” said Le Viet Anh (Business Director of Alpha International Food JSC) based in Yen Phong, Vietnam. “We have now decided to find and set up an authorised agent in Colombo to represent us. We are interested in potential joint ventures at distribution level here for our health confectionaries, which are based on tropical fruits.” Business Director Anh’s Alpha International Food is a top confectionary producer in Vietnam reporting annual revenues exceeding US $ 80 Mn.
source: http://www.news.lk / News.Lk / Home> News> Latest – Defence / May 18th, 2014

Slovenia gets yet another ayurveda centre

In yet another boost to the increasing popularity of the Indian alternative medicinal system, the tiny Central European republic of Slovenia got its fourth ayurveda centre in the picturesque town of Bled.

The inaugural ceremony Tuesday included a Bhartnatyam recital by two Slovenian dancers who performed a Thillana, Pushpanjali and Ganesha Vandana in natural surroundings overlooking Lake Bled. The ceremony was attended by dignitaries of Slovenia, India’s Ambassador to Slovenia, Sarvajit Chakravarti, and a number of other international guests, according to an Indian embassy statement.

Following the recital, those attending the event were given a guided tour of the new ayurveda treatment facility.

Overlooking the beautiful Lake Bled that is surrounded by the snow-clad Alps, including Slovenia’s national peak Triglav, the ayurveda centre is a collaborative enterprise of Ayur Ashram of Dharwad in the south Indian state of Karnataka and the Kompas Hotel in Bled.

India’s Department of Ayurveda, Yoga and naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy (AYUSH) has provided information support to the centre.

Treatment will be provided under the supervision of Indian-origin Slovenian Vaidya Samo Safic Gupta, president of the ayurveda section of the Association of Integrative Medicine of Slovenia, which promotes the use of traditional medicine and alternative therapies.

Ayurveda and yoga are highly respected and widely popular in this Balkan nation of two million people. Slovenia already had three ayurveda centres staffed by qualified Indian ayurvedic practitioners and therapists at capital Ljubljana, Portoroz and Lasko.

The University of Primorska at Koper organised a World Congress of Ayurveda in 2009 and is now working on creating a chair of AYUSH with support from the Slovenian government and AYUSH in India.

Many Ayurvedic texts have been translated into Slovenian. Ayurvedic herbal products are quite easily available here.

The launch of an ayurveda centre in Bled, which annually hosts the Bled Strategic Forum and has initiated the Bled Film Festival, is expected to boost awareness of ayurveda and its efficacy more widely across the world, as the little town hosts dignitaries and travellers from over a hundred nations every year.

Indian dignitaries have frequently participated in the annual Bled Strategic Forum, a platform for high-level strategic dialogue among leaders from the private and public sectors on key issues facing Europe and the world in the 21st century.

Former Indian prime ministers Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi visited Bled several times.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> News-IANS> Health-Medicine / by IANS / Ljubljana – May 07th, 2014

Dubai medical tourism packages with visa, hotel

Providers of medical tourism packages will be required to acquire membership of Medical Tourism Club

by Majorie van Leijen

Come September, and people visiting Dubai seeking medical care will be met with more than a treatment on a hospital bed: visa, hotel accommodation as well as recreational activities for families who accompany patients will be included in the medical tourism package.

Hospitals and healthcare facilities that wish to provide services to medical tourists will be required to provide all-inclusive medical tourism packages and acquire membership from the Medical Tourism Club from September 1, 2014, the Dubai Health Authority (DHA) said.

The initiative is aimed to streamline medical tourism for the emirate by including all stakeholders in the process. “All relevant stakeholders including immigration, aviation industry, hospitality sector, and public and private hospitals will work together to ensure medical tourists receive both excellent treatment as well as world-class hospitality that Dubai is synonymous with,” explained Ramadan Ibrahim, Director of Medical Regulation and of the Medical Tourism Programme.

Under the scheme, providers of medical tourism packages will be required to acquire membership of the Medical Tourism Club, a non-profit club subjected to eligibility of the provider.

“For example, they need to provide us details of the specialties they would like to promote, details of the doctors who provide those specialties, the number of procedures they have conducted, etc,” said Ibrahim.

“In addition to medical facilities, we will also evaluate hospitals on the basis of the comfort and ease they provide patients. This includes checking whether they have translators, chauffer services etc., which will all be part of the medical tourism package.

Based on the score, which is to be evaluated by the DHA, providers will receive platinum, gold or silver membership. “The first package will be launched in September this year and will be wellness and preventive services package,” adds Ibrahim.

Priority areas of medical tourism services in the UAE are orthopaedic and sports medicine, plastic surgery, ophthalmology, dental procedures, dermatology and preventive health check-ups.

In a business that globally turns around $30 billion annually and is expected to double by end-2020, Dubai aims to utilise its position as a leading tourism destination and extend it to include an offering of its medical services.

A Dubai Medical tourism website will be launched by the last quarter of 2014 and will include all details and hyperlinks of the approved members.

source: http://www.emirates247.com / Emirates247 / Home> News> Emirates / by Majorie van Leijen / Tuesday – May 13th, 2014

“Meditels” Provide High-Quality Korean Medical Care and a Resort-Like Space to Foreign Patients

Seoul ,  South Korea :

WE Hotel is constructed as a “Meditel” in South Korea’s best resort province of Jeju Island.

Over 20 Meditels, which are built for patients to experience both the high-quality medical services of South Korean hospitals and a resort-like space, will be established nationwide by 2020.

Last March, the South Korean government officially allowed the construction and management of Meditels for foreign patients visiting South Korea to enjoy both high-quality medical services and tourism.

Meditel is a compound of “medicine” and “hotel”. It is built to provide Korean medical services and lodging facilities in one building to foreign patients. Currently, five Meditels, where foreign patients are expected to visit, are under construction.

The first Meditel that opened in South Korea is the WE Hotel in Jeju Island, the best tourism site of South Korea.KRW 60 billion was invested and the WE Hotel recently opened with 90 guest rooms. In particular, the hotel provides five-star hotel services and medical services. The Jeju Provincial Government prepared for three years for the construction of the Meditel. WE Hotel is a five-storied Meditel with a land area of 29,980 sq. m and a building area of 4,830 sq. m. Taking advantage of the beautiful natural scenery of Jeju, the Hotel provides diverse programs, such as trekking and hiking to foreign patients.

WE Hotel is drawing much attention among high-income patients of Asia, including China and Japan. Many foreign dignitaries participated at the WE Hotel’s opening ceremony. Its primary goal is to draw over 5,000 patients annually.

In addition, the construction of a Meditel with 700 five-star class guest rooms is expected to be completed in 2017 in Gimpo-si Gyeonggi-do Province in South Korea. The Gimpo Municipal Government is recently building a medical tourism business hotel in the Gochon logistics complex jointly with an investment consulting firm in Hong Kong.

In turn, Daegu-si will open two Meditels with five-star class hotel facilities by May this year. These Meditels will provide five-star class hotel services and medical services of 10 hospitals.

The Busan Metropolitan Government will also create a medical resort town with a Meditel in its Dongbusan tourism complex jointly with the Busan Medical Industry Association by 2017.

“Starting this year, Meditels are expected to be actively constructed to provide both high-quality medical services and tourism services to foreign patients visiting South Korea,” an officer of the Korea Health Industry Development Institute said. “They are expected to provide better services to foreign patients visiting South Korea, whose number is rapidly increasing by the year.”

Inquiries: KHIDI, Global Healthcare Business Department

JAY. Lee / 82-70-8146-8980 / widersceo@gmail.com

Source : KHIDI

source: http://www.news.gnomes.es / Gnomes National News Service / Seoul, South Korea / May 06th, 2014