Category Archives: Medical Treatment/Health Treatment Subject By Speciality

Coordination, next bet to scale up medical tourism in TN

Ramping up: The Apollo Hospitals group is one of muchsought after destinations by medical tourists. / The Hindu

Ramping up: The Apollo Hospitals group is one of muchsought after destinations by medical tourists. / The Hindu

Healthcare players say airlines, airports, hotels should work together

Chennai :   

Healthcare practitioners in the State have urged all stakeholders for a coordinated effort to promote medical tourism.

While Tamil Nadu is already a hub, there is no coordination among hospitals, airlines, airports, hotels and resorts, said Srinidhi Chidambaram, Vice-President, Apollo Hospitals Group, at a CII conference on medical tourism. “All allied sectors must form a consortium to help medical value travellers.”

Raja Sabapathy, Director, Ganga Hospitals, said hospitals must also work together to share best practices and learn from one another.

Last year, the country earned revenues of $2.5 billion from health tourism, driven by factors such as affordable prices, shorter waiting period for patients, clinical excellence and high success rate. Around 1.1 million foreign patients are said to have visited India in 2012.

Growing at a compound annual growth rate of 26 per cent, health tourism is poised to cross $3 billion by the end of this year.

Tamil Nadu, with its well-known hospitals in Chennai, Coimbatore, Vellore and Madurai, contributes 40 per cent of India’s medical tourism industry. The state is especially sought-after for treatment relating to cardiology, oncology and neurology.

Mike Nithavrianakis, Deputy High Commissioner, British High Commission, said apart from corporate hospitals, Tamil Nadu also boasts of several not-for-profit institutions such as Sankara Nethralaya, CMC Vellore and Aravind Eye Hospitals.

Research institute IIT-Madras is also making headway in finding innovative solutions for cataract surgeries and cheaper ultrasound scanners. British specialists and universities are willing to collaborate with the State and country for more breakthroughs, said Nithavrianakis.

But India needs to watch out for competition from Cuba, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Israel and Jordan, which are also keen on promoting medical tourism.

“Lack of uniform pricing among hospitals, lack of insurance coverage for overseas medical care and stringent visa norms are a few stumbling blocks,” said Srinidhi Chidambaram.

Widespread NABH accreditation (National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers) and standardised norms for alternative remedies will assure travellers of a positive experience in the country, she said.

source: http://www.thehindubusinessline.com / Business Line / Home> Industry> Travel / The Hindu Bureau / April 19th, 2013

Iran earned $1.5bn from health tourism last year

Rasht, Gilan Prov. :

healthIranCT11apr2013

Deputy Head of the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism organisation Manouchehr Jahanian said here on tuesday that Iran hosted 200,000 health tourists last year. 

Addressing a ceremony to open Qaem Hospital in the northern city of Rasht on Tuesday, Jahanian said the countryˈs income from health tourism stood at $1.5 billion.

He said the tourists were from Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Iraq, Turkey, India and Pakistan.

He added that last year, more than 4.5 million foreign tourists spent nine billion dollars in Iran creating jobs for 2.5 million people directly or indirectly.

He noted that enjoying diversified climates as well as numerous tourist and historical attractions are among advantages of Iranˈs tourism sector.

source: http://www.irna.ir / Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) / Home> Latest News / April 09th, 2013

Room with a view and a root canal, please

HIgh quality, low prices: Dr. Poonam Batra's Delhi dentist service. / Photo: Graham Crouch

HIgh quality, low prices: Dr. Poonam Batra’s Delhi dentist service. / Photo: Graham Crouch

Medical tourism is a growing international phenomenon.

A dental problem, a strong Australian dollar and a ticket to India: it was the perfect combination for my own ”off-shoring” project. It began when my dentist surprised me with a $2500 quote to have a tooth capped. Luckily, I was about to take a three-week holiday on the subcontinent.

India is known for its flamboyant street dentists who’ll pull a tooth for less than $2 while you sit on the footpath. But India’s rapidly expanding middle-class demands more sophisticated treatment. Medieval dental traditions are now offered side-by-side with state-of-the-art clinics staffed by well-trained dentists.

I made an appointment with Poonam Batra, a dentist in Delhi, to see if she could fix my tooth. Her neat waiting room was reassuring, especially a large pin-board with photos of Dr Batra with prominent clients from Delhi’s diplomatic corps including a former US ambassador and Australian high commissioner. If they had treatment here how could I go wrong?

The inside of Batra’s surgery looked just as high-tech and hygienic as any I’ve been to in Sydney and her two studious-looking male dental assistants could have passed for IT consultants.

The straight-talking Batra recommended similar (although not identical) treatment to what my Sydney dentist had advised. The two sessions I required in the chair over the course of a week went like clockwork. After each visit I received a text message from the surgery saying: ”Hello Sir. Just checking-up. How are you feeling?”

With service like this on offer at a fraction of the price of an Australian dentist, its no surprise the number of people having their teeth fixed in Asia is rising.

Cassandra Italia, from medical tourism company Global Health Travel, estimates at least 25,000 Australians went on a dental tour last year.

”Going overseas for medical treatment used to be quite frowned upon,” Italia says. ”There was a stigma associated with it because people thought you would be compromising on quality. But now there’s much more awareness in the community about medical tourism and it’s growing very fast every year.”

Dental care is a thriving subset of a worldwide medical tourism boom that has lasted more than a decade. Figures on the size of this market are sketchy but some estimates put its value at more than $US100 billion ($95.4 billion) a year. Anita Medhekar, a Central Queensland University economist who researches medical tourism, says the industry is still at least a decade from maturity and destined for further strong growth.

Thailand is recognised as the market leader in medical tourism. Its tourism authority says 1.5 million foreigners visited Thai hospitals in 2008 generating about $US6 billion for the Thai economy. Bangkok’s huge Bumrungrad International Hospital has been tagged the world’s first ”global hospital” and treats more than 400,000 foreigners a year. Bumrungrad has more than 30 medical specialties including dental services. But Thailand faces stiff competition in the medical tourism market especially from India, Singapore, the Philippines and Malaysia.

India’s low wages make it one of the cheapest destinations for medical tourism. The subcontinent also has a vast pool of well-trained medical professionals, many with Western training, and English is widely spoken. The growth of the Indian economy has been matched with rapid growth in high-quality medical facilities. Specialist ”medi-cities” featuring luxury accommodation and research facilities have been built near large cities to target growing offshore demand. One in Gurgaon, near Delhi, is spread over 17 hectares, has 45 operating theatres and caters for more than 20 medical specialities.

Lynne Pezzullo, a Deloitte Access Economics health economist, says the ”invisible hand” of market forces has been fundamental in the medical tourism boom.

”People are going to where the resources are relatively cheaper – Australia, of course, has very costly specialised and highly skilled labour,” she says.

”That means people will go to where they can get a similar level of service at perhaps a substantially lower cost.”

But other forces are also at work.

”Part of it is the rising costs of health care in Western countries, differences in quality and accessibility of services, information technology, lower transport costs, reduced language barriers and trade liberalisation,” says Pezzullo, who wrote a report about medical tourism in Australia for the federal government in 2011.

Italia believes social media has also helped legitimise medical tourism and stoke demand.

”Some patients are posting videos of their treatment on YouTube and people are getting on the internet and seeing people’s testimonials,” she said. ”That creates feelings of safety and security.”

Italia says demand for dental tourism is growing faster than other treatments such as cosmetic surgery and IVF. Her firm experienced a 40 per cent increase in demand for dental trips between 2011 and 2012.

Medhekar says people with little or no dental insurance are the most likely to opt for treatment in Asia.

”Demand for offshore dental work will grow because these services are not easily available and affordable for everyone here in Australia,” she says.

However, Pezzullo points out that the cost of overseas travel and accommodation means dental tourism is still out of reach for many low-income families.

”Among middle-income and upper-income Australians the options to go overseas for dental care are becoming more relatively attractive,” she said.

”The people that miss out twice are lower income and disadvantaged people who may have very acute dental conditions – with a lot of pain. They might be self-medicating because of a lack of access to dental care but are also excluded from going overseas for care because they can’t afford the travel.”

Treating a foreign traveller was nothing new for my Indian dentist – Poonam Batra has been peering into the mouths of dental tourists for 17 years. They have helped her build a thriving practice with five specialists offering a range of services. Her foreign patients normally have ”email consultations” before arriving in India and then arrange their travel around their dental work.

”The dental tourism trend has persisted and the volume of my tourist patients has gone up,” Batra says. ”Now they fly in and out for root canals, crown and bridge work, veneers, wisdom-teeth extractions and implants.”

”The wonderful thing is some come back repeatedly and bring friends or family.”

I was surprised by how much my off-shoring project saved me. Dr Batra charged $312.90 for my treatment, about one-eighth of what I was quoted in Sydney. In effect, the scheme paid for my airfare. But many dental tourists save far more than I did – Ms Cassandra Italia cites examples of people having dental work that would have cost $50,000 in Australia done for $15,000 in Asia.

So are Australian dentists worried about off-shoring? Chief executive of the Australian Dental Association Robert Boyd-Boland says any profession would be uneasy if business was going offshore because of price.

”It is a concern that there’s a market overseas that’s taking work that Australian dentists might otherwise be able to undertake,” he says.

The profession’s response has been to highlight the quality of Australian dental services and warn of the risks of having treatment abroad.

The association says there has been a ”disturbing increase in the number of Australians returning from overseas having received dental treatment with problems that are very difficult to address”.

It also warns that infection control standards are less rigorous in some other countries. Boyd-Boland says serious dental problems often require months of treatment and many dental tourists are in danger of rushing complex procedures.

”If it all blows up and there’s a need to have it fixed here in Australia the expenses will escalate and the saving that a patient thought they’d make will well and truly be lost,” he says.

Many Asian medical centres have responded to concerns about quality and hygiene by gaining top-level accreditation. Even so, Batra says dental tourists need to be careful. ”Things can go very wrong. The best referral is word of mouth really.”

source: http://www.m.smh.com.au / Home> Travel> Travel News / by Matt Wade / April 05th, 2013

Nigeria: Caretaker Service for Medical Tourism

To support Nigerians and Africans seeking medical help in the United States, there is a Medical Concierge Services, writes Adeola Akinremi

“We feel pained that people come here and get stranded,” says Adebowale Adeleke, the chief Executive Officer at the Washington DC, United States based Medical Concierge Services. “It is not useful to travel miles and get to United States to become stranded not knowing what hospital to go or medical expert to consult or spend more for less trying to seek medical solution to ailment.”

In Washington DC, Where Medical Concierge Services (MCS) operates as a health care hospitality services, Nigerians and other Africans who seek medical help abroad thronged the city, but in most cases, Adeleke says, “they spend more for less.”

“We started MCS as a response to bottlenecks of finding and establishing contacts with a specialist hospital in United States by foreign patients coming from Nigeria and Africa. It is the traditional model of international medical travel support where patients generally journey from less developed nations to major medical centres in highly developed countries for medical treatment that is unavailable in their own communities without having to go through the trouble involved themselves,” he says.

Firmly ensconced in the capital city of United States with at least over a few years of experience in providing first-class health care services to patients from international countries, patients coming from abroad to the United States for medical care now turn to MCS because of its excellent reputation for personalised services, custom-tailored to each patient according to their individual needs.

Adeleke says, “all treatments are performed by the best-suited specialist physicians at the leading state-of-the-art facilities in the Washington DC Metropolis for the specific procedure indicated. We help to find the most affordable quotes for our clients and also help to arrange their appointments.”

He adds: “Medical Concierge Services is the one-stop resource for accessing premium medical services in the metropolitan Washington DC area. Our concierge approach helps reduce the stress of looking for a physician or awaiting a referral to see a specialist. We organize our clients’ medical appointments to ensure a hassle free visit to the physician/specialist based on our vast network of medical professionals, knowledge of the medical industry standards and experience. Other services we offer include airport pickup, transportation services to and from all medical appointments, as well as other ancillary needs. We offer assistance with logistics such as hotel accommodation and short-term lease apartments for clients who require such service. ”

In the US, health care system though advanced, remains very complex especially to those paying for these services out of pocket. MSC according to Adeleke will bridge such gap “from the point of arrival of any client and through the duration of their stay, we will serve as their guide and facilitator on all medical affairs. We are committed to making your medical experience smooth and stress-free. We offer various forms of medical packages that include: prenatal and delivery packages for pregnant women, executive health Physicals for Men and Women; age and gender appropriate health physicals and cancer screening, annual physicals, job physicals, screening Colonoscopy, and medical referral programs for specialist evaluation.”

Clearly, more Nigerians seek medical support from abroad and United is one of the countries frequently visited for medical reasons.

Indeed, for Nigerians, this is not a normal time. Improvement in health care services across the country is of major concern, as Federal Medical Centres and teaching hospitals remain ill-equipped, under-staffed and under-funded. The increased burden of preventable diseases such as polio, malaria, cholera and heart- related diseases that have now over-stretched Nigeria’s health care facilities, and lack of improvement in medical services is forcing more and more Nigerians, who can afford it, to seek better health care services abroad.

According to a 2012 BGL report on Nigeria health care system, infrastructure decay, brain drain, incessant workers’ strikes and low investment in the sector characterize health care services in Nigeria. Collectively, all tiers of the healthcare system have suffered. In 2011, national spending on teaching hospitals and federal medical centres was estimated at N204 billion, approximately 79% of the government’s health expenditure. However, only N20.25 billion (10 per cent of total hospital expenditure) was allotted to capital expenditure in spite of insufficient medical equipment.

In the BGL report, the Federal Ministry of Health alluded to the fact that, the human development indices for Nigeria were among the worst in the world. Nigeria shoulders 10 per cent of the global disease burden and it’s making slow progress towards achieving the 2015 targets for the MDGs on health care.

Instructively, health care delivery indices in Nigeria have largely remained below country targets and internationally-set benchmarks due to weaknesses inherent in the system.

Chief Medical Director at Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Prof. Akin Osibogun says medical tourism is a global phenomenon, stating that there are several reasons why people all over the world leave their countries for medical assistance abroad. According to him, “medical tourism is a global phenomenon. People travel from United States to Cuba for medical assistance too. It is the human spirit, which is adventurous. People go on medical tourism for issues of privacy and preference.”

Usually Concierge physicians care for fewer patients than in a conventional practice, ranging from 100 patients per doctor to 1,000, instead of the 3,000 to 4,000 that the average physician now sees every year, especially in United States. The Concierge physicians generally claim to be accessible via cell phone or email at any time of day or night or offer some other “special” service above and beyond the “normal” care provided and their annual fees vary widely for an individual.

Some concierge practices do not accept insurance of any kind. These are also referred to as cash-only or direct primary care practises. By refusing to deal with insurance companies, these practises they believe can keep overhead and administrative costs low, thereby providing affordable healthcare to patients.

And they are called “concierge” only if the practise assesses an annual or monthly fee instead of or in addition to a fee for each medical service.

While concierge patients get a special contact number, dedicated appointment time, and various other benefits that enable the doctor to offer more advice and advocacy, the quality of the care, Adeleke says remains the same for patients and it is all about cost control.

source: http://www.allafrica.com / Home> Health / April 04th, 2013

Hair implant with your ski trip? Turkish tourism branches out

Istanbul :

Sitting in a private clinic in an upscale neighbourhood of Istanbul, Saleh, a human resources executive from Qatar, is preparing to leave Turkey with a smile on his face and more hair on his head.

Having previously brought his wife and children to Istanbul for sightseeing and shopping, Saleh has returned as the new kind of high-spending visitor Turkey is increasingly seeking to attract: a medical tourist.

“There’s a social pressure to look good,” the casually suited executive, declining to give his family name, told Reuters as he sat waiting for a check-up a day after having hair follicles implanted in his balding scalp.

“Two of my brothers and half of my friends had hair implants in Turkey. It was an easy choice after that.

As it tries to boost tourism revenues and narrow its current account deficit, its main economic weakness, Turkey is on a mission to diversify away from the all-inclusive package tours to its sun-drenched Mediterranean shores which, local businesses complain, often do too little for the local economy.

Of 37 million tourists visiting Turkey last year, about 270,000 came for surgical procedures, from moustache implants and liposuction to operations for serious ailments, generating $1 billion in revenues and representing a small but growing fraction of tourism receipts.

“They usually come for three days. We offer them shopping or skiing tours, they get well and have a short vacation,” said Kazim

Devranoglu, the medical head of Dunyagoz Group, which has 14 eye care clinics in Turkey and branches in western Europe.

Around 10 percent of the group’s patients – some 35,000 people a year – are now coming from abroad, he said.

“They are mostly from western European countries like Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, as well as from Algeria and Azerbaijan.”

There are various factors behind Turkey’s appeal.

People from countries with heavily congested health systems welcome the opportunity to choose the time of their surgeries, while those from less-developed nations are attracted by Western-trained medics and new facilities sprouting up as Turkey’s private healthcare industry flourishes.

The moustachioed stars of Turkish soap operas, popular across the Middle East and North Africa, have also prompted an influx of men seeking a virile addition to their upper lip.

Health professionals and patients say plastic and corrective eye surgery costs, including travel and accommodation, can be up to 60 percent below comparable programmes in western Europe.

The government aims to double medical tourist numbers to half a million a year over the next two years and raise revenues to $7 billion by attracting them to higher-margin healthcare.

“We see Turkey as a prime destination for medical tourism,” said Dursun Aydin, head of the international patients department at the Health Ministry. “We have experienced doctors. Hospitals are new…Turkey is relatively inexpensive and the temperate climate helps too.”

TAX-FREE HEALTH ZONES

The phenomenon is a boon not only for Turkey’s tourism industry, which risks locking itself into a price war with rival destinations such as Greece and Spain, but also for its booming private healthcare industry.

Parliament passed new regulations in February to make private investment in the healthcare sector easier, a move it hopes could unlock billions of dollars of investment over the next few years.

Private equity investors favour Turkey’s fast-growing services industries, including healthcare and education, because of a near tripling of nominal, per capita gross domestic product over the past decade and a young population of 75 million.

Foreign institutions including Malaysia’s state investment arm Khazanah Nasional, U.S. private equity firm Carlyle, emerging markets investor ADM Capital, Qatar’s First Investment Bank and the World Bank’s International Finance Corp (IFC) have put money into the Turkish healthcare sector.

Turkey’s status as a medical tourism destination could add to the allure. Though the idea is still on the drawing board, the government is considering airport-accessible, tax-free health zones which would aim to attract up to 85 percent of their patients from abroad, while offering tax incentives for investors.

Under the new law passed in February, which facilitates public-private partnerships, the state will rent city hospitals built and run by the private sector for 25 years.

“The aim is to revitalise ageing hospitals. While built primarily for Turkish citizens, they’ll be luxuriously equipped and will aim to draw at least some of their customers from abroad,” said the Health Ministry’s Aydin.

ECONOMIC DIVIDEND

Growth has already been phenomenal, said Tolga Umar, chief executive of Visit and Care, a patient and doctor matching service which helps visitors from the Middle East and Europe.

“We’ve been matching patients and doctors for six years now. Back then there were few other players, but now hospitals have international patient management departments doing direct marketing,” he said.

“Even tour operators ask prior to a visit whether you want to have a dental exam or corrective eye surgery.”

Boosting tourism revenues is key to keeping a lid on Turkey’s current account deficit, which narrowed to around 6 percent of GDP in 2012 from roughly 10 percent in 2011. Net tourism receipts reached $21.6 billion last year, while the current account deficit stood at $47 billion.

Turkey is the world’s sixth top destination by tourist arrivals, according to the World Tourism Organization, but it may require strategies such as the medical tourism drive to maintain that status.

“Decreasing prices in Greece and Spain since the debt crisis mean that the competition for tourists is more intense,” said tourism consultant Fehmi Kofteoglu.

Timur Bayindir, head of Turkey’s TUROB tourism industry association, said: “What the industry needs is alternative tourism channels like medical and shopping tourism.”

That could mean men with red dots on their heads – a tell-tale sign of freshly implanted follicles – becoming a more common sight as they stroll through Istanbul’s designer malls, snapping up a last few purchases at the end of their medical tours. (Editing by Nick Tattersall)

source: http://www.mercurynews.com / Home> Travel / by Can Sezer and Ceyda Caglayan, Reuters / April 04th, 2013