Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

The North America Office of Düsseldorf Tourism and Düsseldorf Airport Announce Düsseldorf, Growing as Major Destination for Medical Tourism

Düsseldorf’s popularity as a travel destination has grown immensely over the past years as more and more travelers from all over the world discover the many delightful qualities of this city on the Rhine. Nearly 4.25 million hotel nights were booked in 2013 in Düsseldorf, breaking last year’s record of 4.0 million, and around 40% of hotel nights booked by visitors from abroad, with visits by US travelers up 15.8%.

But it’s not just the leisure traveler who is discovering Düsseldorf – the city is also becoming a major destination for medical tourism. Drawn to its world-renowned clinics, health centers, and universities featuring top-rated physicians in a setting of world-class cultural and luxury living options and a superior global infrastructure, well-heeled medical tourists are increasingly making Düsseldorf their top choice.

Many of the medical tourists visit to seek treatments, consultations, and second opinions in the areas of dentistry, plastic surgery, rehabilitation, reproductive medicine, obesity, diabetology, and ophthalmology. Patients not only find top facilities in these and other fields, but also an infrastructure ideal for short and long-term stays. Many hotels, for example, are equipped for the needs of medical tourists, with some hotels even offering in-house doctor offices and treatment rooms or direct access to clinics.

Moreover, the warmth and sophistication of a small yet cosmopolitan city is something that many patients prefer during a medical stay over bigger, noisier cities with more stress factors. Düsseldorf, with most of its great resources and attractions in walking distance of the city center, offers the perfect mix of big-city convenience and small-town comfort that supports the healing efforts of medical tourists. Some of Düsseldorf’s biggest attractions include the quaint, historic Old Town, high-end shopping boulevard Königsallee, modern Media Harbor with its variety of stunning super-star architecture, and 20 castles in and around the city, including famous Benrath Palace. Düsseldorf is also known for some of the best contemporary and classic art collections in the world, and in total has 100 galleries and 26 museums, including K20 & K21 (showing 20 and 21st century art, respectively).

Last but not least, Düsseldorf Airport is a major international airport offering connections from 64 airlines to 192 destinations in 55 countries, including many direct long-haul connections. There are direct flights to 7 North American airports, as well as China and Japan, making comfortable travel for medical reasons easy from nearly anywhere in the world.

source: http://www.digitaljournal.com / Digital Journal / Home> Press Release / Dusseldorf, Germany / PRWeb.com / June 25th, 2014

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India makes medical tourism push

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Australia India Travel and Tourism Council (AITTC) has named Dr Hemani Thukral as Director Medical Tourism, a new role created to assist interested parties considering India as a suitable destination for medical treatment. Thukral has experience in both business and … Continue reading

Ethiopian Capital Setting Up Medical Zone To Boost Health Tourism

Addis Ababa :

The Ethiopian North American Health Professionals Association (ENAHPA), a body formed by Ethiopian professionals in the diaspora to promote healthcare in Ethiopia, will establish a medical zone in Addis Ababa to turn the city into a centre for medical tourism.

According to Feisel Aliyi, an official of Directorate-General of Diaspora Engagement Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the ENAHPA and the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) have signed an agreement to develop the zone to become East Africa’s centre of excellence for cancer treatment to benefit member states of IGAD.

Cancer patients from East African countries, including Ethiopia, have been travelling to European countries and Bangkok to seek better medical treatment at a high cost.

Feisel said the establishment of the zone will reduce the need to travel and save hard currency, further noting that the centre will provide advanced medical treatment currently not available in this region.

ENAHPA has over 300 Ethiopian health professionals living in North America and Europe.

— BERNAMA-NNN-ENA

source: http://www.bernama.com / Bernama – National News Agency of Malaysia / Home> World> News / Addis Ababa – June 23rd, 2014

“Medical tourism” on the rise as Americans shop for surgery

Indianapolis :

It is a sign of the times – Americans shopping for surgery in what is now referred to as “medical tourism.”

One 22-year-old Monticello native is doing just that. Priced out of the American market for weight loss surgery, Amanda Martincich is now looking outside of America and to fellow Hoosiers for help.

Amanda Martincich is considering surgery options out of the country.

Amanda Martincich is considering surgery options out of the country.

“As you can see, I have always been kind of heavy,” Martincich said as she looks through pictures from her childhood.

She feels as though she is fighting a losing battle. Weight loss programs are not working. Family insurance, since her stepfather is self-insured, does not cover gastric bypass surgery, so she made a decision.

“In the U.S., it costs $25,000-40,000. So if insurance doesn’t cover it, it’s too much to come up with,” she said, sitting in her parents Indianapolis home.

So she started shopping for surgery online. That led her to a company called Medko, which matched her up with surgery program in Chile.

“I am willing to try anything unless something stands out that says that is not safe or not legit,” she added.

Medkohealth is a program designed to match people with less expensive surgical options elsewhere in the world. Frustration has led her to this point.

“People are like, ‘Get a job, save money.’ People won’t hire people who are overweight,” Amanda admitted.

So, living in America, she is looking to South America for help.

“If this country was so great, then me being able to find insurance would not be so difficult,” she said.

Amanda wants to get a degree in criminal justice, but first things first. That means setting up a website to help raise the money she needs.

“46 people have viewed it, but only one has donated,” she noted as she looked at her fundraising website.

To her, the situation she finds herself in is criminal, but it is what it is.

“I’m going to go with medical tourism. I don’t have any choice. I will just have to come up with the money,” she noted.

Amanda had hoped to leave for surgery this week, but obviously, funding is still a big problem. She has two options, one in Mexico and the other in Chile, which is where the company Medko is based. She says the surgery that would cost her up to $40,000 here in America will cost up to $13,000 in this program. She believes she will be able to use her primary care physician here in Indianapolis for follow up following the surgery.

If you decide to shop around – whether its inside the country or outside – medical experts recommend you first “check with your insurer.” Don’t make a big bill even larger by shopping for care outside your health insurer’s network.

Also, press for details. Make sure you have the full picture of potential bills you may face from the surgeon, anesthesiologist and the surgery center.

Finally, think hard about quality. Don’t weigh just price. Consider the surgeon’s experience or the hospital’s infection and re-admission rate.

source: http://www.wthr.com / Wthr.com – Indiana’s news leader / by Kevin Rader , Indianapolis / June 03rd, 2014

Indian doctors come home to medical tourism hub

Chennai :

One of the multitude of Indian emigrant doctors, Paul Ramesh moved to Britain in the 1990s, keen to get the best surgical training and earn a generous pay packet.

Today he is still treating Westerners — but in hospital beds back in Chennai, his south Indian hometown in Tamil Nadu state.

(In Chennai, known as India's…)

(In Chennai, known as India’s…)

“When I came back it was quite exceptional to return. Now it’s the rule,” the 46-year-old told AFP at the city’s Apollo hospital, soon after performing a heart transplant on a woman from the United States.

In Chennai, known as India’s healthcare capital, medical workers describe a “reverse brain drain” as homegrown doctors return from the US and Europe — at the same time as the city develops as a top budget destination for medical tourists.

While the number of Indian doctors abroad remains substantial, Apollo staff say their national hospital chain now gets 300 applications annually from those working in Britain alone, encouraged by improved living standards and better medical technology at home.

Traditionally drawn to the West to boost their expertise and earnings, doctors also cited tightening salaries under Britain’s National Health Service and increasingly tough US healthcare regulations as factors luring them back.

“The trend is reversing,” said M. Balasubramanian, president of the Indian Medical Association in Tamil Nadu.

“More corporate hospitals are coming up, especially in Chennai. Now (doctors) have an opportunity to use their expertise in their own place… and pull the patients from abroad also,” he said.

Inside the Apollo, with a lobby bustling more like a marketplace than a typical hospital, K.P. Kosygan has just carried out a double knee replacement on an elderly Kenyan patient.

The consultant orthopaedic surgeon came back from Britain in 2011 and said there was “a regular stream of doctors coming back”.

“Certainly when I left India there were not many joint replacement centres or surgeons in India who could train us,” he said.

Now doctors want to “share our experience we have gained across the globe,” he said — adding that many were also pulled back to look after ageing parents, in a country where family ties are paramount.

As well as treating Indians, Kosygan said he now treats patients “from almost every corner of the world” who are drawn by the cheap costs.

Patients Beyond Borders, a US medical travel resource, says the cost of certain Indian medical procedures can be up to 90 percent lower than in the United States, making it one of the cheapest places for treatment.

While most patients come to India from the Middle East, Africa and other parts of Asia, interest from America is growing, said Patients Beyond Borders CEO Josef Woodman.

“On a heart operation they can save $50,000 to $70,000,” he said. Among those to make such a saving was Doug Stoda, who travelled to Chennai from the United States for a specialised hip procedure by an Indian surgeon who learnt the technique in Britain.

Stoda’s wife Ann said it was a “big deal” for them to travel to India, having never previously been outside North America, but she said they had “a very good experience”.

“We just had to get to the airport in Chennai and they had everything set up,” she told AFP by telephone from their home in Wisconsin.

At Apollo, a dedicated “international patients” area has clocks on the wall showing times in various cities including New York and Tokyo while various translators are present to deal with foreign arrivals who number about 70,000 a year, the hospital says.

Country-wide, the medical tourism industry is expected to see a more than 20 percent annual growth rate between 2013 and 2015, according to global consultancy firm RNCOS.

Many patients come from countries “where they do really require quality expertise at a more affordable price,” said Anto Sahayaraj, 42, who returned from New Zealand in 2012 to work at the Frontier Lifeline Hospital in Chennai.

Speaking to AFP after performing a heart procedure on a one-month-old baby from Bahrain, the specialist in paediatric cardiac surgery said foreign patients were encouraged by Indian doctors’ overseas experience.

“They see a lot of Indians in Western countries and they realise that some of us do come back. With us technology comes back, so they have increasing confidence.”

For all India’s advances on the global stage, doctors emphasised ways in which the country’s healthcare system is still sorely lagging.

N. Ragavan, a consultant uro-oncologist specialising in prostate cancer, returned to India from Britain last year and pointed out the “million-dollar difference” between the two countries.

While Britain enjoys universal healthcare coverage, many Indians struggle to pay for quality private treatment, while public services are poorly funded and governed.

“Financial affordability is the biggest problem that India faces,” said Ragavan, 41, who hopes the country’s low health insurance cover will grow substantially over the next decade.

He said the benefits of working in one of India’s corporate hospitals include speedy medical investigations and hardly any waiting lists, but the lack of working directives means he is now at the hospital for up to 17-hour days.

“Working in India is a double-edged sword,” he said. “It’s never organised here. What I’m going to do next week is not sure, and what I’m going to do this week is very chaotic.”

source: http://www.articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / Home> Healthcare / AFP – June 12th, 2014