Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

Medical Tourism Attracting Tourists To Dubai

DubaiCT19jun2014

Dubai is set to become the medical tourism hub of the world.

Medical tourism (traveling abroad to undergo elective surgery) has become increasingly popular in the last few years with patients attracted by lower costs of plastic surgery in foreign countries.

Since Dubai is already a leading destination for leisure and tourism and has world-class health facilities and internationally accredited hospitals , the Dubai Health Authority (DHA) held a meeting last week with stakeholders from the medical tourism initiative to discuss the possibility of turning the proposed medical tourism initiative into a reality.

Among the stakeholders present at the medical tourism meeting were representatives of the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs, Dubai Tourism and Commerce Marketing, Department of Economic Development, Emirates airline, Emirates Holidays, and Dubai Healthcare City.

The DHA sees medical tourism as an extension of the hospitality industry which Dubai is known for and therefore sees this as a viable source of revenue. There are 2,518 health facilities in Dubai and more than 70 percent of hospitals have international accreditation. Patients are likely to feel more comfortable with the highly accredited hospitals and therefore Dubai has the potential to draw a substantial amount of medical tourism.

The DHA believes that if the stakeholders work closely together, aligned with the overall medical tourism strategy, Dubai can provide a comprehensive medical tourism system with extensive care and convenience from the time the patient arrives in Dubai, through their procedure to their follow up.

The director of the medical regulation and medical tourism programmed at DHA, Dr. Ramadan Ebrahim, said he’ll be working closely with hospitals, making sure they fulfill the criteria of medical tourism including creating medical tourism packages that will include treatment, visas, hotel accommodation, and recreational activities for family members that may accompany the patients.

Although the packages seem affordable, there are still risks involved with medical tourism. A survey conducted by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons found that 80 percent of responding doctors had treated complications including infection, contour abnormalities, and hematoma after a medical tourism trip.

Medical tourism promises patients the same level of quality care abroad at a lower cost but often the quality is compromised  which leads to follow up, corrective treatments, costing the tourist more money.

The first medical tourism package in Dubai will be launched in October this year.

source: http://www.inquisitr.com / Inquisitr / Home> Travel / by George Nielsen / June 15th, 2014

Cosmetic surgery tourism all the rage with Irish patients

CosmeticSurgeryCT14jun2014

Dublin , Ireland :

Cosmetic surgery tourism is on the rise with Irish patients jetting to far-flung destinations for tummy tucks, nose jobs, breast implants and hair transplants.

The Czech Republic, Poland, Belgium and Britain are the plastic surgery hotspots for Irish medical tourists, according to new research by private healthcare search engine WhatClinic.com.

Instead of soaking up the sun, many Irish people are now using their holidays to go under the knife in foreign clinics largely due to cheaper rates, with Turkey becoming a hotspot for hair transplants, while the Czech Republic is the top destination for tummy tucks.

The number of Irish enquiries to foreign clinics through Whatclinic.com for cosmetic surgery has increased by 54% over the past year from 1,450 queries in 2013 compared to 942 queries in 2012.

There has been a 135% increase in searches for breast implants in Poland, the second most popular destination for the procedure outside of Britain.

The Czech Republic has seen an increase of 158% in Irish patients enquiring about tummy tucks over the past year and it is also the number-one foreign destination for Irish patients undergoing rhinoplasty or nose operations.

The destination most popular with Irish men for hair transplants is Turkey where it costs €1,745 compared to almost double the cost at €3,065 in Ireland, according to WhatClinic.com.

There has been a 233% jump in enquires into the procedure, famously undergone by Wayne Rooney and Louis Walsh.

Caelen King, CEO of WhatClinic.com, said our new cosmopolitan population has helped to open up Irish people to foreign medical systems.

He urged medical tourists to do their homework thoroughly before booking into a clinic in another country.

“The consumer needs to take the time and effort to educate themselves. The truth is when you go abroad things can be more difficult than they are at home and you need to have done your research and you need to be comfortable with what you are doing.

“If you are going to get a facelift done you want to make sure you are comfortable with the individual surgeon and the follow-up care that’s going to happen, even if you are getting it done in Dublin but more so if you are getting it done overseas.”

Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics like fillers and botox are rocketing in popularity as society becomes more obsessed with staying youthful, Mr King said.

“There is no question that medical aesthetics like dermal fillers and injectables and dental cosmetics have grown dramatically and are continuing to grow dramatically. 15 years ago it barely existed.”

Source: irishexaminer.com
source:  http://www.eturbonews.com / eTN Global Travel Industry News / Dublin, Ireland / www.irishexaminer.com / May 31st, 2014

 

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

Visa-free travel, medical tourism to double Russian visits to South Korea

Similar events in the “Successful Russia” promotion will be held in Beijing in June, in Tokyo in September, and in Shanghai and Hong Kong in November

Tourists in Seoul (archive)© ITAR-TASS/Alexander Ryumin

Tourists in Seoul (archive)© ITAR-TASS/Alexander Ryumin

Seoul  /ITAR-TASS/.

Russian tourists travelling to South Korea are expected to double to 350,000 this year after the introduction of a visa-free regime in January and growing interest in medical tourism, travel specialists predict.

“Seoul is Russians’ favorite South Korean city,” Korea Tourism Organization’s Chung Jae-Soon told ITAR-TASS at a Russia-Korea tourism congress there on Friday, predicting the volume to leap from the 175,000 making the journey in 2013.

Russian Tourism Agency recommends Russian vacationers to show vigilance in Thailand

Russian Tourism Agency recommends Russian vacationers to show vigilance in Thailand

The increase will be buoyed by special tourism promotions between the two countries in 2014-2015. This sits alongside business travel reported vibrant and incomers arriving for medical treatment, numbering 24,000 in 2012.

Traditional popularity among health-conscious visitors from Russia’s Far East is now also gaining ground in central Russia, said the authority’s Chung.

But conference organizers have also been promoting Russian resorts as destinations for foreign guests. Events are being organised by the Russian Federal Agency for Tourism (Rostourism) and the Russian Travel Association’s World Without Borders.

Similar events in the “Successful Russia” promotion will be held in Beijing in June, in Tokyo in September, and in Shanghai and Hong Kong in November.

source: http://www.en.itar-tass.com / Itar Tass News Agency / Home> Non-Political / May 30th, 2014

Hungary showcases Health and MICE facilities

The recently concluded Arabian Travel Market witnessed a showcase from Hungarian Tourism to better educate the Middle East travel trade. A delegation from Hungarian Tourism launched a new marketing initiative to fuel visitor growth from the region.

Budapest in Hungary

Budapest in Hungary

Gergely Horváth, CEO of Hungarian Tourism said: “The Middle East market has been a growing and increasingly important source market of visitors to Hungary over the past couple of years. We see positive signs to suggest that this trend will continue and expect a further increase in visitors from the region.”

Hungarian Tourism will now focus its marketing efforts on highlighting destination and niche markets that target specific consumer segments – health tourism, MICE, honeymoon segments.

For health tourism, the country offers cosmetic procedures and spas along with Hungary’s traditional medicinal water therapies. The MICE facilities can be availed across its 5,000 room inventory of luxury accommodation

source: http://www.traveldailymedia.com / Travel Daily ME / Home> News / May 11th, 2014