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Pharaon: Lebanon remains one of top medical tourism destinations

Tourism Minister Michel Pharaon

Tourism Minister Michel Pharaon

Beirut , Lebanon :

Despite the volatile security situation, Lebanon remains one of the top destinations for people seeking medical care in the eastern world, Tourism Minister Michel Pharaon said Sunday.

“Lebanon has been the hospital of the East, starting from the 1970s and up until today, because it still enjoys some advances in medicine,” Pharaon said in a speech to the ninth annual World Health Tourism Congress.

The three-day conference, held in Dubai this year, launched Saturday at the Mohammed Bin Rashid Academic Medical Center, where high-ranking officials and public health experts gathered.

It was the first time the congress, which is sponsored by the Lebanese Tourism Ministry this year, was held in the Middle East.

“Despite the political and security situation that Lebanon is suffering from, the country seeks to diversify its tourism, especially that the medical tourism is an essential pillar of tourism in general,” Pharaon said.

source: http://www.eturbonews.com / ETN Global Travel Industry News / October 20th, 2014

Gallery

Burjeel hospital bags two health tourism awards

Burjeel Hospital for Advanced Surgery in Dubai has won two global awards at the ninth edition of World Health Tourism Congress held in Dubai recently.  The hospital bagged the ‘Specialty Hospital of the Year’ award, while its CEO Dr Shajir … Continue reading

Medical travel aids Lufthansa in resuscitating bottom line

LufthansaCT03oct2014

New York : 

When an airline executive proudly announces, “It’s better to get a heart attack on Lufthansa than any other place,” you know right away she has a different perspective and isn’t ready to dismiss the profit-making potential of the airline’s medical and health division.

While sun and fun is nice and business travel is rebounding from the global economic downturn, medical tourism is growing by 15-20 percent a year according to PatientsBeyondBorders.com.

Stefanie del Signore, manager of Lufthansa’s leisure, medical and health division knows that better than most. She spends her time traveling the world, demonstrating a menu of health-related special services offered by the German carrier. From 18 different ingredient-restricted meals and supplemental oxygen to larger seats and flexible tickets for people traveling to or from medical treatments, del Signore is touting medical companions, physician services, a stretcher in a curtained off area or even a full and private onboard ICU.

You read that right. With 48 hours notice and for between 32,000 to 68,000 euros, Lufthansa can install what it calls its Patient Transport Compartment (PTC) in the center of some of its widebody Boeing 747-400s and Airbus A340s. Here, ill or recuperating travelers, their doctor and a medically trained escort have the equivalent of an intensive care unit for the duration of the flight.

“Lufthansa is the only airline offering this service, it’s like a hospital in the air,” del Signore, said of the PTC which is complete with high tech gadgets and monitors. Developed by Lufthansa Technik, the unit and seating meets regulatory crashworthiness standards even with a traveler in a lie-flat position and unconscious.

“The bulk of our business is coming from Arabic and Russian countries,” del Signore told me. Still, of all the medical products Lufthansa offers, the PTC is the least used. More common is the stretcher that can be ordered with 48 hours advance notice, and is placed in an area of about 8 seats in the back of the economy section. One need not be rich or suffering from some exotic illness to need it. In fact, a number of elderly cruise customers having injured themselves at sea have paid about 18,000 euros to fly prone from Miami to Frankfurt.

“Sometimes people do risky sports outside during holidays, para gliders, motorcycles and they have serious accidents,” said Dr. Raoul Breitkreutz, the airline’s Medical Director. Lufthansa used the stretchers to evacuate 3,600 Germans in need of medical care following a tsunami in December 2004, an operation that took four days and one that Dr. Breitkreutz called the most difficult of his career at the airline.

Most of Lufthansa’s customers are taking advantage of the less sophisticated medical paraphernalia, including a 24-hour call center staffed by medical professionals, oxygen on board and access for people with limited mental or physical abilities. But it is the Technik-designed specialized stretcher and flying ICU that took millions of dollars in development money that show great promise. Dr. Breitkreutz points out that because big airliners can fly long distances without refueling, flying a patient on an airliner is a faster alternative to transport by private jet.

Several of the PTCs have been sold to the US military, 12 are on Army Lockheed C-130 Hercules aircraft, Dr. Breitkreutz said. A few have been installed on the airplanes of private citizens in the Middle East.

There are rumors that both Gulf carriers, Etihad and Emirates have been working on their own version though neither airline responded to questions on this subject.

“This is the heart of our medical product because we are the only airline that shows to the public we are really unique and we really care,” del Signore told me enthusiastically at the end of a meeting explaining it all to slack-jawed reporters. Here is where, from del Signore’s perspective, medical travel can do its part to resuscitate Lufthansa’s bottom line.

source: http://www.runawaygirlnetwork.com / RunAwaygirlNetwork / Home / by Christine Negroni / New York

Thriving Medical Tourism Brings Boon for Interpreters

Kozhikode :

“Medical interpretation is not as easy as the translation of a speech. More than word by word translation an interpreter should properly convey emotions of patients to the doctor and bridge the gap between them,” said Georgiana Vandana, Deputy Manager, Medical Value Travel, MIMS Hospital.

Presence of a competent interpreter can help ensure that doctors don’t misdiagnose the condition. “A professional interpreter is a great relief for us while dealing with foreigners, especially Arabs, who seldom speak English,” said Dr R Bijayaraj, family physician with MIMS, Kozhikode.

Often cultural inhibitions prevent women patients from sharing personal details. That was the reason why Shamsa Salem from Oman specifically requested assistance by a woman interpreter.

“I feel more comfortable while I am with a woman in the scanning room,” said Shamsa.

Khadeeja, a 50-year-old interpreter from Kozhikode said it is important that healthcare professionals understand the cultural background of their patients. “It can be a decisive factor while suggesting treatment,” she said.

N P Muhammadali, interpreter and manager of the Department of Overseas Operation in Al Shifa Hospital, Perinthalmanna, said there is a significant increase in the number of women applicants for the post of interpreters in recent years.

“Women patients were reluctant to reveal details with male interpreters. The number of women patients from abroad increased after we appointed a woman interpreter,” he said.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Kerala / by Aswathi Krishna / September 22nd, 2014

Courage, leadership, investment needed to effectively push medical tourism here, experts say

Mikayla Whitmore From left, Douglas Geinzer, CEO of Las Vegas HEALS; Ann Lynch, chairwoman of Las Vegas HEALS’ board of directors; Stowe Shoemaker, dean of UNLV’s college of hotel administration, / Mikayla Whitmore

Mikayla Whitmore From left, Douglas Geinzer, CEO of Las Vegas HEALS; Ann Lynch, chairwoman of Las Vegas HEALS’ board of directors; Stowe Shoemaker, dean of UNLV’s college of hotel administration, / Mikayla Whitmore

When people fly out of town for medical care, they often go abroad for low-cost surgery or head to such world-class centers as the Mayo Clinic for care they can’t get at home.

They don’t usually think of coming to Las Vegas for massages, face-lifts and lap bands — but business boosters are trying to change that.

Las Vegas is severely short on almost every kind of doctor and can’t compete with U.S. cities whose top-flight medical centers get patients from around the world. To boost medical tourism, advocates want to promote the dozens of resort spas on the Strip and the valley’s plastic surgeons, bariatric specialists and certain other care-providers. Boosters also want to lure more medical conferences to a city teeming with corporate conventions.

If they succeed, they will overcome Las Vegas’ medical shortfalls to capture a larger share of the $50 billion to $60 billion global medical-tourism sector, a long hoped-for but elusive goal.

“We need to look at this in a different way,” said Ann Lynch, a former longtime executive at Sunrise Hospital & Medical Center. “We’re not going after a Mayo or a Johns Hopkins; we’re going after a Las Vegas tourism-style of medical care.”

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance, UNLV and industry advocate Las Vegas HEALS released a report this month outlining how the valley can boost medical tourism. Among other things, Las Vegas needs locally based medical schools, more training programs for medical-school graduates, more industry meetings and more travelers seeking spa treatments and outdoor recreation, the groups said.

Promoting Las Vegas as a hub for critical, specialized care doesn’t add up. The valley has a steep shortage of physicians, and locals often head to Southern California or elsewhere for treatment.

Efforts are underway to produce more doctors, but in the meantime, Las Vegas still can lure health-seeking travelers, boosters say.

Doug Geinzer, CEO of Las Vegas HEALS; Stowe Shoemaker, dean of UNLV’s college of hotel administration; Michael Vannozzi, director of public policy at the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance; and Lynch, chairwoman of Las Vegas HEALS’ board of directors, spoke Tuesday with the Las Vegas Sun’s editorial board about medical tourism.

Edited excerpts:

Geinzer: We have pockets of excellence in bariatrics, weight management, plastic surgery, orthopedics, cancer, brain health. Patients can travel here and bring a loved one who stays at, say, Green Valley Ranch Resort. When the patient gets discharged, they can spend a couple extra nights with their family in Las Vegas while going through rehab. If someone wants to get plastic surgery, what better way than to travel here, protect their anonymity, and come back from a vacation looking very vibrant and alive.

Can people enjoy a vacation after receiving medical treatment? Aren’t they laid up for a while?

Geinzer: It depends on the procedure, and keep in mind, many times you have a companion who’s traveling with them. This is a great place to recover, from a post-operative standpoint, and a great place to come before the surgery, because you’re able to enjoy the amenities.

Las Vegas has a steep doctor shortage. How can you convince people to come here for medical treatment?

Geinzer: We do have a doctor shortage; can’t argue that. But if you look at medical tourism, it’s not primary care. It’s at the specialist level.

But there’s also a big shortage of specialists in Las Vegas.

Geinzer: Certainly, and those are ones we’re not promoting. We have a wealth of cardiovascular thoracic surgeons, for instance, some of the best in the world. That’s what medical tourism is about — getting world-class doctors to come here, to take advantage of the 40 million visitors who travel through here each year.

One thing you mentioned in the report is promoting resort spas and medical conventions. People here are already doing that. How is what you’re proposing different?

Geinzer: With spas, you’re right, it’s occurring. But more and more people are seeking wellness treatments. We’ve got 45 world-class spas on a three-mile stretch of land. No other destination has that. They can see about 1,000 patients an hour, and they are in fact patients. I’ve been battling skin cancer for 20 years. What’s the best way to defeat that? Early detection. How do I see spots on my back? Imagine you’ve got someone on a table; imagine the types of preventative care you can deliver. With meetings, we have a wealth of business professionals who come to Las Vegas two or three times a year. We know they’re coming in, so we’re able to get repeat visitors, talk to them during a spa treatment, and coordinate care for a return trip. Age management, weight management — all of that comes out of that spa environment.

Shoemaker: MGM Resorts has just put in “stay-well” suites, and they charge a premium for them. They have specialty lighting, citrus-infused shower heads, air purifiers. This is a trend that’s happening already.

Will there be a point where medical providers partner with hotels for promotions? Stay at our resort and get your knee fixed, for instance.

Geinzer: There are rumors — I won’t confirm or deny them — that folks from the Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins have been in town talking to the Shops at Crystals and other organizations about that. These are world-class brands looking at Las Vegas.

Could Las Vegas ever compete with the likes of Mayo or Cleveland clinics?

Vannozzi: We could get there, but it’s going to take investment, some courage, and some leadership. We are looking at what we have, creating incentives for new doctors to come in, and we need to build out the medical schools being planned at UNLV and Roseman University of Health Sciences. We need to do a lot of work, but it’s conceivable.

Shoemaker: It’s going to take a long time for this to develop, but we have to start somewhere. We do have specialists here; let’s promote those. Over time, that will bring more specialists. Is it going to happen overnight? No. Are we going to become a Texas Medical Center right away? No. But we do have certain things that work very well. And that’s how we’ve approached this. It’s defining health and wellness travel where medical procedures are just one part of it.

source: http://www.vegasinc.com / Vegas Inc / Home / by Ell Segall / Wednesday – August 20th, 2014