Category Archives: Reports,Features, Statistics

Russia’s medical tourism up, but domestic industry in need

RussiaCT23nov2013

Rising costs and long waits for quality healthcare are pushing millions of people each year into medical tourism.

In the developed world, healthcare forms a significant part of a country’s economy. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the annual revenue of that country’s industry in 2012 was roughly $1.688 trillion. World Bank figures show that public health expenditures in the European Union could jump to 14 percent of GDP in 2030, from 8 percent in 2000.

By traveling in search of quality at a lower price, medical tourists seek alternatives to their own countries’ healthcare offerings. Depending on the destination and treatment, a medical vacation can cost 50, 30 or even 10 percent of what patients would pay at home.

The number of wealthy Russians traveling abroad for treatment is making the trend especially noticeable.

“At the moment, there are roughly 200,000 Russians traveling for medical purposes each year, and they leave approximately $2.5 billion during their stays,” said Alexei Kamenev, president of the First All-Russian Association of Private Medical Practitioners, in his opening speech at last week’s Medical and Health Tourism Mart in Moscow.

The meeting is the first-ever direct sales platform set up in the global medical and health tourism industry.

Israel a top location

Israel is Russian health tourists’ favorite destination, Kamenev said, with 50,000 traveling there in 2012 – doubling the amount in 2011 and contributing more than $1 billion to the country’s economy.

He outlined three main groups of people who seek medical treatment abroad. The first strand travels from countries with less developed healthcare systems to more developed ones, for example from Russia to Israel or Germany.

The second strand is citizens of countries with good but expensive healthcare going to places with high quality but more budget-friendly options, such as Americans traveling to Asia. The third strand looks for alternative medicine in locations such as Tibet because mainstream treatments have proven insufficient.

Countries that are just emerging onto Russian tourists’ radar were also present at the event, hoping to crack the Russian market – such as Spain.

Hungary is already popular for some Western European patients, especially for dentistry, plastic surgery and its world-famous thermal baths and spas, but Angelina Strizhkova, the director of the Prestige Haz hotel and spa in the western city of Heviz, lamented that it has little advertising on the Russian market.

“The doctors [in Heviz] are wonderful, they’re all highly skilled professionals and at the same time they charge much less than German or Austrian doctors, but, unfortunately, Hungary lacks advertising and marketing on the Russian market,” she said. “I’d like to see that situation change.”

Profits in the middle

The growing popularity, though, has given rise to several problems, Kamenev told The Moscow News – such as middlemen, who he said are making heavy profits off of Russian patients.

“I met with a very respectable Israeli doctor recently and asked him why the prices our patients are shown are so ridiculous,” Kamenev said. “He said to me, ‘Alexei, these prices are five times higher than what we charge!’ So where’s the money? The profiteers have it all.”

His organization is attempting to make the industry more transparent and consumer-oriented by creating a new international online platform called MedOkey, comprised of some of the most prominent doctors and clinics worldwide. It is set to start work at the end of the year.

A single flow of Russian patients through accredited international agents will help “remove all profiteering and non-medical components from the industry,” Kamenev said, by displaying comprehensive price lists, thus putting middlemen out of business.

MedOkey already has the backing of the World Health Organization and the World Medical Association. Kamenev has also been in negotiations with Israel to allow Russian citizens to use their public healthcare services, reaching agreement on a 10 percent quota that he believes will save thousands of lives.

Care begins at home

Kamenev’s organization has also agreed with Israel on a deal whereby Russian doctors can visit on educational exchanges, to learn about advanced technologies that Russia does not yet have and eventually improve domestic care.

Approximately 90 percent of Russia’s top medical facilities and doctors are located in Moscow, where only 10 percent of the population lives. Russia’s experience with medical tourism, Kamenev believes, will allow it to try to apply international best practices at home.

A glimpse of this future comes from RZD Zdorovye, a subsidiary of state rail monopoly RZD, which has a chain of spas, medical resorts and sanatoriums throughout the country. The company’s Daria Sokolova and Dmitry Mishin said that many of its doctors have trained abroad, including in traditional Chinese medicine, and that its sanatoriums have attracted some patients from Western Europe and North America.

One benefit of domestic medical tourism is lower prices, because they include travel, accommodation and treatments, Mishin said. In Israel, for example, only consultation costs are included.

Even the lack of a language barrier brings the price down, and a cultural sympathy can make treatments more effective.

“Russian doctors understand the specifics of our mentality and our illnesses, so we treat what needs to be treated, avoiding losing things in translation,” Sokolova said.

Denis BerengoltsDeutsche Klinik Allianz, Germany:

“Each year the number of Russian patients coming to our clinics is rising, and currently averages at about 2,000 visits per year. We mostly get patients from Moscow and the bigger regions. Patients are seeking all kinds of medical treatments, but most of the demand is for oncology, orthopedics and cardiology. I think that they come to Germany mainly because it has secured its reputation as one of the strongest countries in terms of medicine and highly advanced technologies. And it’s more affordable than other Western European countries.”

Marina WerbitzkayaClinique de Genolier, Switzerland 

“The Russian market is growing and it’s growing fast – there is no slowdown. Russian-speaking patients make up about half of all our foreign patients. Of course, there are other lucrative regions from which European clinics are receiving patients, as well, like China or the Arab countries, but we are now putting significant marketing and advertising efforts into attracting even more people from Russia and the CIS countries….

“Russians are close to Switzerland geographically and culturally. They are affluent and very interested in their health and medicine, and, of course, the Russian patient is a consumer. They like to consume only high-quality services, and they see Switzerland as a country that can give them this…. They [go there] to get what they can’t in Russia.”

source: http://www.themoscownew.com / The Moscow News / Home> Arts & Entertainment > Business / by Maria Stambler / November 21st, 2013

Medical tourists on the rise

According to Jeju province, there are currently 26 different medical institutions on the island attracting foreigners as medical tourists. 

A medical law revision meant that more facilities were allowed to open. There are now three times as many medical institutions than there were in 2009.

In addition, the number of agencies attracting medical tourists increased from one to nine. It is for this reason that the number of tourists is showing sharp year-on-year increases.

The Korean Health Industry Development Institute released a report detailing the number of foreign patients last year. 17,000 people visited for medical reasons, 7.6 times more than three years ago in 2009, which was the first year when medical tourism was heavily promoted. Jeju attracted 720 foreign patients in 2010, and 740 patients in 2011.

Thanks to this upward trend, revenue is showing significant growth. Last year medical tourism brought in 1.27 billion won, 12 times 2009 figures.

Meanwhile, the Jeju Free International City Development Center is constructing the Jeju Health Care Town in Seogwipo City, and Jeju is also managing its main hospitals, making sure they are ready to attract additional foreign patients.

source: http://www.jejuweekly.com / The Jeju Weekly / Home> Tourism> Tourism News / November 18th, 2013

Punjab to promote Medical tourism in big way: Sukhbir

Punjab deputy Chief Minister  Sukhbir Singh Badal  today said that the state is all set to promote medical tourism in a big way as this sector has a great scope to boom the state’s economy.

Addressing the gathering while presenting the Human Achievers Awards at CII, Badal said that Medi-City at the New Chandigarh (Mullanpur town) would be established on 300 acres, where hospitals of world class standard would be set up.

He said that New Chandigarh has the potential to emerge as the Medical Hub of North India as the state has already equipped with first-class infrastructure in the health sector comparing to the other states.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> PTI Stories> National> News / by Press Trust of India / Chandigarh – November 14th, 2013

Chinese show keen interest in ‘Gangnam-style medical hallyu’

A Korean medical tourism information session involving 12 hospitals from Seoul’s Gangnam district took place at Yangyuan Hotel in Dalian City, China on Friday. The event brought together more than 300 people, including citizens and officials from local medical tourism agencies, and local hospitals. The participants attentively watched presentations by medical doctors from Korean hospitals, including Samsung Seoul Center, MizMedi Women`s Hospital and BK Plastic Surgery Hospital, who are widely recognized for excellence in their respective fields of medicine. The event was organized to attract Chinese patients who have growing interest in quality medical service amid China’s robust economic growth. Accompanied by chiefs of 12 major medical institutions including general hospitals, medical checkup centers, plastic surgery clinics, skin clinics and gynecological clinics, and their professional interpreters, the Gangnam ward office, which hosted the event, visited Dalian’s Zhongshan ward, a district in sisterhood relationship with the former.

Shin Yeon-hee, chief of the Gangnam ward office, said “Gangnam district is a hub of medical tourism, where visitors can receive diverse medical services, ranging from severe illness to cosmetic plastic surgery, because it is home to more than 2,400 hospitals, including those for plastic surgery, skin care, and spinal surgery as well as general hospitals.”

Jiang Suhua, chief of the Jhongshan ward office who invited Gangnam ward, said, “Among Korea’s medical technology, cosmetic plastic surgery is widely known in China for its excellence.” He added, “I hope to see expanding exchange between Gangnam ward and China, and generation of significant achievements.”

Also notable at the information session were local patients in Dalian City, who visited the event to receive one-on-one counseling with Korean medical doctors. A 75-year-old man requested counseling, saying that he had stomach pain after undergoing rectal cancer surgery. Prof. Park Min-jeong from Seoul National University Hospital’s Gangnam Center inspected treatment records and prescription with a translator’s assistance, to find that improper drug was subscribed, and gave the Chinese patient advice on medicine and dietary habit. Local medical tourism agencies who recruit patients for medical tourism also attended the event and inquired Korean hospital officials about various medical services.

Officials from Korean hospitals expressed strong expectation that such an information session will significantly contribute to boosting the number of medical tourists to Seoul. Noh Seong-il, chairman of MizMedi Women`s Hospital, which is widely known its advanced sterilization surgery among patients in Russia and Central Asian countries, said, “Up until the time when we first visited Russia several years ago, we never expected that sales revenue from Russian patients at my hospital would increase to 4 billion won (3.8 million U.S. dollars) level this year. We should more proactively promote Korea’s medical technology.”

Seeing opportunities in the Chinese medical tourism market, Gangnam ward office has been stepping up efforts to attract Chinese patients by visiting Chinese cities including Beijing and Tianjin in 2010, and Guangzhou and Shanghai in 2011. The number of Chinese patients who visited Gangnam ward has been rising year after year from 5,766 in 2010 to 8,295 in 2012.

source: http://www.english.donga.com / The Dong-A ILBO / Home> Archives / November 11th, 2013

Will Colombia’s Gamble On Medical Tourism Pay Off?

International medical tourism is big business worldwide. Countries like India and Thailand lead the way as top destinations for people looking for high quality care at a fraction of the cost back home.

Lately, countries closer to the U.S. are also trying to break into the market — such as Colombia — which until recently was better known for drug trafficking than nose jobs.

Not long ago, when the global economy was booming, analysts were saying Americans were pouring out of the country for medical procedures. One projection said the number would reach almost 11 million annually by 2013.

Colombia, which was seeing huge improvements in safety and tourism, decided they wanted in on the action. Since then, they’ve been building facilities specifically designed for medical tourists.

San Vicente de Rionegro is a new hospital, less than two years old. It sits on a country road in the lush, green hills outside downtown Medellin. The middle of nowhere, really, except that it’s only a few minutes drive from the city’s international airport — perfect for international patients.

The facility is massive, but San Vicente only focuses on six surgical specialties ranging from organ transplants to cosmetic procedures, all of which are popular with medical tourists.

“If you want to be one of the best hospitals in the world, you have to start with a facility like this one,” says Dr. Sergio Franco, the head of cardiovascular surgery at San Vicente.

Franco says foreign patients come here to get the same quality services that they’d find in the U.S., but with a more caring approach and at a fraction of the cost.

One patient said a heart surgery he needed would have cost as much as $286,000 in Houston. In Colombia, it was only $26,000.

Those savings also attracted Jeff Daniels to Colombia. He’s a Brooklynite in need of some serious dental work not covered by his insurance.

“I’m getting a dental implant and several crowns; I got two root canals,” Daniels says. This is his second trip to Medellin in a month and he’ll be back a few more times before he’s through.

On his first trip, Daniels says he was nervous. He doesn’t speak Spanish and he’d heard about drug cartels and crime, not to mention the ongoing internal conflict that’s killed hundreds of thousands of people — mostly civilians.

“I expected it to be kind of like a warzone,” he says. “Just the opposite was true. I find it to be no more dangerous than New York.”

That is exactly the message that Colombia wants to get across. They’ve handed out big tax breaks and have pumped millions into ad campaigns.

As a result, tourism is way up, and medical tourism is growing too. New hospitals and clinics are popping up all over the country, usually with affiliations to big-name hospitals in the U.S. A new facility in Cartagena just broke ground a few months ago. They’re even going to have a beach resort right there for patients’ families.

But the numbers aren’t as promising as the analysts projected back in 2008.

“From what I’ve been looking at, less than 20,000 people a year. This is not millions of people,” says K. Eckland, an American nurse who has interviewed hundreds of surgeons in Colombia and written three guide books on medical tourism.

Eckland thinks the option to go abroad for people without health insurance can save the lives, but she’s also worried about the cost to Colombians.

“When you attract your top surgeons to an exclusive destination tourist facility, you have them there and the people who come to that facility will get it,” she says, “but you’ve also robbed everybody else of the opportunity to be treated by the best and the brightest.”

Nonetheless, these types of projects keep moving forward in Colombia. And, at least for now, there’s no telling if their bets will pay off.

source: http://www.wwno.org / The University of New Orleans / Home> Parallel / by Andrew Fishman / To see more visit www.npr.org / Tuesday – November 12th, 2013