Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

Oman, Thailand ties ride medical tourism wave

Dr.Pornchai Danvivathana is Ambassador of the Kingdom of Thailand to the Sultanate of Oman

Thailand has become a well-known medical tourism destination, thanks to the collaborative efforts of the public and private sectors in response to the rising demand for medical treatment.

Over the years, medical tourism has proven to be a lucrative business for a number of countries in Asia as it generates a lot of income for all stakeholders in tourism and its related industries.  In order to remain competitive in these services sector, Thailand has relaxed its immigration law to promote medical tourism, and at the same time to facilitate treatment of premium quality, including tourist attractions, for patients coming to Thailand.

Taking effect on January 5 this year, the new regulations allow nationals from Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), to stay in Thailand for medical treatment up to a period of 90 days without a visa.  A tourist-cum-patient falling into this category may be accompanied with no more than three individuals of GCC nationals (i.e. parents, children, spouse or maid), who will likewise enjoy a 90-days visa exemption.

It should be noted that those wishing to get the benefit of the 90-days visa exemption shall present certain documents required for their eligibility.  Nationals from South Korea, Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru are also eligible for the present scheme due to the respective agreements on a 90-day visa exemption concluded between Thailand and those countries.

Other than medical tourism, Thailand has gained a lot of recognition in spa and wellness. The government agencies concerned have worked with all stakeholders in Thailand to set appropriate standards and criteria for Thai masseurs and masseuses and for businessmen who are offering Thai spa and/or wellness within the country and abroad.

In this regard, Thai herbal medicine may be infused with massage and spa to offer tourists and the local people the best quality of services of this kind. Extra-entrepreneurial skills, as well as integrity and accountability, to run the business are additional elements Thailand has taken steps to enhance for meeting international standards.

To put it simply, Omani people and other GCC nationals, except Saudi nationals, who can apply for a visa on arrival for a stay of 15 days, may go to Thailand and are eligible to the 30-days visa exemption as usual.  They may now enjoy the 90-days visa exemption, if proof of medical purpose is presented at the airport.

I would like to underline that Thailand has more to offer to non-Thai visitors, in addition to hospitality and friendship it has never failed to provide.  Communication and travel as a result of medical tourism could be the prevailing avenue to promote people-to-people connectivity, thus strengthening ties between Oman and Thailand in the years to come.!
Dr.Pornchai Danvivathana is Ambassador of the Kingdom of Thailand to the Sultanate of Oman.

source: http://www.timesofoman.com / Home / by Dr. Pornchai Danvivathana / Friday, February 22nd, 2013

Vitals healthy for UAE’s billion-dirham growth in medical tourism

Medical tourism market slated to grow at 7% this year; healthcare spending to hit $16.8bn by 2015

The UAE is fast developing into a top draw for medical tourism in the region, with latest research estimating the market valuation at $1.6 billion, with a seven per cent growth expected by end of 2013 as per market research firm, Euromonitor.

This is only fuelled further by the Economic Intelligence Unit Estimates, which calculates the UAE’s healthcare spending to rise to a whopping $16.8bn by 2015.

While researchers can crunch on these figures, the spending is a clear outline of the Masterplan 2020 that will peg the country as one of the top medical tourism destinations in the world.

Speaking at the ongoing Arab Health Congress, Dubai Health Authority Director General Essa Al Haj Al Maidoor spoke about the country’s efforts, explaining: “Firstly, it is important to recognise that it isn’t just the organic medical industry, but other factors also that come into play in boosting our positioning as one of the most sought after health tourism hubs today.

“The UAE’s central geographic positioning, the efforts in connectivity by its airlines, the relaxing of visas have all collectively helped the efforts. It is what you call a one stop shop for all your needs.”

Yet, in the centre of it all are the state of the art facilities and the planned spending in its healthcare sector that continues to draw in the tourists.

The government of Dubai has already taken a proactive step in creating a unified health tourism board, combining the expertise of the DHA, along with that of the Dubai Healthcare City and the Department of Tourism and Commerce Marketing, in facilitating the influx of medical tourists.

“The newly launched tourism initiative under the directive of the Crown Prince and the Chairman of Dubai Executive Council, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, is strategising and identifying specialties that will fill market gaps that exist currently to draw in medical tourists,” he explained.

“Investors will be facilitated to invest in the right fields, but expansion is imminent across all specialties.

“We are striving to build a healthy environment that will provide a perfect platform to the people looking for excellent medical care.”

In a landmark move, a joint initiative, spearheaded by the DHA and the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA), facilitates overseas patients who wish to seek treatment in Dubai to be able to avail of a three-month medical tourist visa, extendible twice up to nine consecutive months.

Currently, only hospitals with international accreditation such as the Joint Commission International (JCI) and those in the process of securing one will be eligible.

Over the last few years, over 40 hospitals and healthcare facilities have been accredited with the JCI across the UAE, further boosting in medical tourism efforts.

But Dubai isn’t alone in its strategic road mapping, with state of the art hospitals such as the Saudi German, which opened doors last year.

Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Healthcare is fast making strides with its partnership with the Ohio-based Cleveland Clinic, which will open a 364-bed facility later this year, with room to increase capacity to 490 beds.

The capital also opened doors last year to Burjeel Hospital, tying up with the prestigious Brussels University.

Meanwhile, RAK Hospital has also been heavily promoting medical tourism these past four years, with visitor packages that are both attractive in pricing and healthcare facilities.

When quizzed about the UAE’s placement in medical tourism on a global arena, Al Maidoor admitted that a few challenges yet have to be overcome.

“Staffing is one of the biggest challenges facing the healthcare sector today, but you also can’t deny that UAE is still a very young player in the field of medical tourism,” he said.

“The $1.6bn that is estimated of this market still stands far away from, let’s say Germany, which is in the ballpark of $462bn.

“However, I am very confident that the UAE is going to be a force to reckon with.”

source: http://www.emirates247.com / Home> Business> Economy & Finance / by Bindu Suresh Rai / Tuesday, January 29th, 2013

Canadians spending big bucks on medical tourism, health expert warns

Edmonton  :

Canadian patients seeking relief from various illnesses are among the major groups feeding a troubling growth in unproven and expensive stem-cell therapies offered at private clinics around the world, a University of Alberta researcher says.

Health law expert Tim Caulfield told a U of A audience that most such clinics are likely frauds, engaging in “science-ploitation” to persuade people to pay thousands of dollars for treatments of questionable value.

“This is a big industry. It looks like thousands of people are doing this, and the major source of patients are Canada, the U.S., and the United Kingdom,” he said Tuesday during a forum on the growing phenomenon of medical tourism. “The clinics offer therapies for almost everything, including ALS, Alzheimer’s, cancer, anti-aging, autism. We don’t even know what causes autism and yet they have a treatment for it?

“There is no proof any of this stuff works,” he said, adding that 43 per cent of patients who visit stem-cell clinics are children.

However, two Edmonton-area men challenged Caulfield during the lecture, saying they had received successful treatment for multiple sclerosis at a clinic in India.

A man who declined to give his full name said he spent $30,000 in July for travel, accommodation and treatment that included the controversial experimental procedure of opening narrowed neck veins. Doctors also grew stem cells derived from his bone marrow and injected them into his spinal cord.

The 39-year-old said the results were undeniable. A “cognitive fog” cleared almost immediately. The right side of his body, which had been partially paralyzed, regained a wide range of motion. His energy level increased dramatically, to the point that he hopes to take part in a body-building competition this fall.

“I’m a businessman, so for me it’s all about risk and reward,” he said. “I did my homework. To assume all of us who do this are stupid peasants who can’t think for ourselves, it’s insulting.”

The man said he researched private clinics for two years before deciding on one that seemed to have the top specialists and the best results. Given that the treatment he was getting in Alberta could only promise to slow the disease, he felt the $30,000 investment was worth it.

He said he was so happy with the therapy, he encouraged his friend to go to India as well. That friend, who returned two weeks ago, said the treatment also cleared his brain fog, resolved his bladder issues and allowed him to walk better.

“My left leg had been paralyzed, but when I woke up after the first treatment, I could move my whole left foot,” said the man, formerly a home inspector. “I get upset because our medical system is not helping us here at home, and now people want to take away this option from us as well.”

Caulfield said he often draws derision from patients whenever he criticizes private stem-cell clinics.

“If people go in with their eyes open, then it’s hard to argue against, but I’m worried people aren’t aware of the scientific data,” he said.

He said there is great promise that legitimate stem cell therapies will be developed one day, but virtually none are close to fruition. Unfortunately, that hasn’t stopped private clinics from trying to capitalize on the public’s fascination with the topic, which is often exacerbated by positive media coverage, Caulfield said.

He said he and his team did a study in 2008, which was repeated last year, to gauge what clinics are offering compared with what the scientific literature says. The group found the clinics use sophisticated online advertising, often using images of people in lab coats to promise their therapies as successful, safe, and routine, “which is wrong, wrong, wrong,” he said.

He said patients have suffered physical as well as financial harm, including cases where people have raised money from their friends, families, churches and communities to pay for treatments.

As for trying to control the market, Caulfield said this is difficult because it is largely international and Internet-based. He said some governments are moving toward tougher regulations and improving education, but more should be done. Among the steps, health care professionals should become more involved in the issue, and the scientific community may need to tone down its rhetoric about the promise of stem-cell therapy, he said.

Another participant at the forum, Dr. Chris de Gara, raised the issue of what happens when Alberta patients come back from a private clinic with unfavourable results and then ask the public system to fix the problem.

De Gara is part of team running a “revisional” bariatric clinic at Royal Alexandra Hospital, catering to people who have undergone anti-obesity treatments that have failed. Some have paid $15,000 to $20,000 for out-of province procedures such as a gastric bypass that often do not deal with underlying psychological or nutritional issues.

“I have three patients in hospital at this moment in time, who suffered consequences of their medical tourism,” he said. “They come to my clinic and I have to do some additional surgery at a huge cost to the system. I am responsible to the human being sitting in front of me, so I must deliver care. But at a societal level, is it up to the Alberta taxpayer to pay for things that didn’t go quite right?”

Caulfield said the issue extends to other patients, such as organ transplant recipients who come home and ask the government to pay for anti-rejection treatment.

“Where do you draw the line? We are starting to see that with, ‘You chose to smoke, you chose to overeat, you chose to be born to poor parents who didn’t go to university.’ ”

Other speakers at the event included Harvard law school scholar Glenn Cohen, who talked about the challenges of curbing the illegal organ transplant market in places such as Pakistan, Bangladesh and India.

Y.Y. Chen of the University of Toronto offered a critique of the supposed benefits of medical tourism to the host countries.

The Edmonton Journal
source: http://www.globaltvedmonton.com / Home / by Keith Vierein, Edmonton Journal / Wednesday, February 13th, 2013

Medical tourists boost service apartments’ growth

People prefer staying at these apartments rather than at hotels during the prolonged treatement

Homemaker Adria Swarney, 50, from Australia scheduled her knee replacement surgery with a leading hospital in Delhi. As it would have taken Swarney and her husband over a month in Delhi, they wanted a place near the hospital and also did not want to spend on a hotel. They preferred a service apartments and were satisfied with their experience with leading service apartment player. They ended up staying for 2 months.

Patients with their families coming from other countries like US, UK, etc usually opt for service apartments for long stays, say industry players. “In the past two years we have had almost 40% business from the guest visiting city (Delhi and Gurgaon) for medical issues. Annual increase for medical tourism in India has been observed by 25% every year,” says Mohini Tripathi, reservation manager at Rated Apartments. The company has witnessed a mix of 60-40 of medical and leisure travellers.

Others like Alacurity, less than two-year old player, caters only to medical tourists. Shyam Znwar, CEO of Alacurity says, “We don’t seek leisure travellers coming for anywhere between 2 and 7 days. We prefer only those who come to stay for 2 weeks or more.”

Bangalore, Delhi, Gurgaon and Chennai are the hot spots for medical tourism. Medical tourists prefer serviced apartments over hotels mainly because serviced apartments are more cost effective than hotels. Tourists have their own privacy. Their family can stay together under the same roof and they can cook as per their own requirement.

Many serviced apartments are close to hospitals, making it convenient to commute without spending much on transportation. Most of the serviced apartments are professionally managed with a 24-hour concierge and assistance in case of an emergency.

Both Rated Aprtaments and Alacurity are e-commerce companies, which act as an intermediaries between the apartment owners and the tourist. Rated Apartments has tied up with companies like Escorts and Fraser for service apartments and has an inventory of 110 apartments. Alacurity has an inventory of 15 apartments in the National Capital Region only.

You can choose between a studio serviced apartment to a 4-BHK penthouse. The apartments generally provide 1 double bed, 1 sofa-cum-bed, a well equipped kitchen, breakfast, a cook if need be for which you need to pay separately. Alacurity also offers specialised services like personal physiotherapist, nurses, medical equipment(s) and so on.

Tripathi says for a 1-BHK apartment in South Delhi you will have to shell out Rs 5,000 a night, where 3-4 people can stay. A penthouse with 4 beds and for 10 people will cost Rs 15,000 in a posh locality with good parking and porch. Znwar says a 1-BHK will cost Rs 40,000-45,000 a month going up to a maximum of Rs 2 lakh for other sizes of apartment with Alacurity. These firms see more expat tourists than Indian ones.

Medical tourism boom is being witnessed across Asian countries including Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. But, India loses out becuase of few shortcomings say industry players, like no transparency in billing system, low patient flow, no platform to promote India’s medical tourism, inadequate and limited patient documentation and most importantly availability of accommodation for the patients’ relatives.

source: http://www.Business-Standard.com / Home> Companies> News> News / by Neha Pandey Deoras / Bangalore, February 12th, 2013

Medical tourism for cancer patients in Latvia

Patients from all over the world are travelling to Latvia to seek treatment from cancer and the Virotherapy Centre has developed a programme to ensure their treatment is as comfortable as possible.

DNE Editor in Chief Maher Hamoud visits the Latvian facilities

The treatment of cancer is constantly changing and many scientists are involved in trying to find a cure for one of the deadliest diseases we are confronted with in modern times. The small country of Latvia is at the forefront of one of the latest treatments for many forms of cancer that is attracting patients from all over the world.

It all began with Latvian scientist Aina Muceniece who began her career in 1945 at the A. Kirchenstein Institute of Microbiology. After years of study the first laboratory for virotherapy as a treatment for cancer was established at the institute, which led to the development of the medicine Rigvir.

Over the years several clinical trials were conducted that proved the safety and effectiveness of Rigvir in stage four cancer patients.

Following the collapse of the former Soviet Union the testing and use in treatment of Rigvir stopped for a few years, but its effectiveness in the treatment of several kinds of cancer, from prostate to bladder, colon, melanoma and lung cancer, had been proven. In 2002 the work began again and since 2005 Rigvir has been used in treatment in hospitals and available in pharmacies all over Latvia. Rigvir activates and normalises the immune system of the patient and is well-tolerated and safe.

Aina Muceniece’s daughter followed in her mother’s footsteps and heads the Association of Virotherapy of Latvia which aims to promote virotherapy and the training of doctors to use the medication. As Rigvir proved to be more and more successful and interest from patients all over the world grew, the Latvian Virotherapy Centre was established to provide treatment and support for those patients.

Currently Rigvir is used in hospitals all over Latvia in the treatment of cancer and has been accepted as treatment for melanoma patients by insurance companies since 2011.

Patients from all over the world are travelling to Latvia to seek treatment and the Virotherapy Centre has developed a programme to ensure their treatment is as comfortable as possible. When a new patient seeks the help of the centre the first consultation is done by phone or email and a complete assessment of the medical records and tests is conducted when the patient is still in their home country.

The clinic then takes care of all the travel, accommodation and medical arrangements for the patient and makes sure that any additional screening and tests are organised to take place in the Latvian hospital. A full treatment plan and follow up is created by the doctors of the clinic after which the treatment starts.

The first round of treatment will take place when the patient is in Latvia, but the follow-up treatments can normally take place when the patient is back at home in their own environment. The arrangements to deliver Rigvir to the patients are handled by the clinic as well, making the whole experience as comfortable as possible for the patients.

source: http://www.dailynewsegypt.com / Daily News Egypt / Home> Lifestyle> Current Article / February 06th, 2013