Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

Rwanda Turns to Medical Tourism, Eyes Regional Dominance

As efforts to boost the budding tourism sector that registered high foreign exchange receipts last year gather momentum, Rwanda is looking at medical tourism, mainly in the region, as another option that could further enhance tourism earnings, a move that could see the country leapfrog its economy.

The tourism sector collected $210.5m (about Rwf133b) between January and September in 2012, up from $184.4m over the same period in 2011, indicating a 14 per cent increase.

A positive outlook for the future of the fast-growing sector, experts say, will depend on the efforts to increase tourism products, including medical tourism.

Medical tourism, also called medical travel, is a term initially coined by travel agencies to describe the rapidly-growing practice of travelling across international borders to obtain health care.

“The government is courting investors to set up advanced medical facilities in the country; we believe this will help make our country a regional tourism hub,” said Rica Rwigamba, the head of tourism at Rwanda Development Board.

Rwigamba was optimistic that tapping into medical tourism would improve the foreign exchange receipts needed to bridge the current trade deficit the country is facing. Rwanda’s trade deficit stands at over $1.2b.

“Medical tourism is something that requires a different approach if one is to attract world class health investment like Dr. Agarwal’s Eye Hospital in Kimironko, Gasabo district. It is also about wooing people to provide quality medical services at affordable rates,” she says.

She adds: “Rwanda is in a good location in terms of climate, the security and quiet environment, which patients need when going through the process of healing.”

“Early last year, I had blood clot complication around my neck, which doctors here failed to handle, so I ended up paying a return ticket of $1,200 (about Rwf 760,000) to India, where I was treated at $2,500 (an estimated Rwf1.6 million). Actually, treatment abroad isn’t that costly. Transport and accommodation are the only costly items,” said Martin Nkuranga, a Rwandan, who received specialised medical care abroad.

Such a story is heard almost every other day. Many patients with complications local doctors cannot handle are always referred for medical attention abroad. This is especially for people suffering from heart defects and health complications like blood cancer, brain tumour and plastic surgery for deformities or acid attack victims. It is important to note that this is a universal phenominon.

This is what has come to be known as medical tourism, a relatively, new segment of tourism that countries with advanced medical facilities and highly qualified experts, have focused on to rake in millions of dollars.

One would note that in spite of the rather huge benefits medical tourism could bring, including the establishment of world class medical facilities, pool of specialists and employment opportunities for the local people, it is an expensive venture for the government to undertake alone.

This could, therefore, be the reason it is wooing investors into the medical tourism segment, where it is targeting regional dominance.

Medical tourism, as many of us know, has always been a reserve of countries like India, Kenya or South Africa, which are earning a lot of money from it, making it a hugely successful tourism option. So, Rwanda, in taking a step to cement itself in this tourism market segment, is opening up the sector to more investment, business opportunities and jobs, experts say.

“The government earmarked the School of Public Health under the National University of Rwanda to carry out the policy on medical tourism,” Arthur Asiimwe, the Ministry of Health communications chief, says.

He, however, noted that statistics showing the number of people who fly in or out of the country for treatment or the amount of money the state loses in terms of foreign exchange would be hard to ascertain as many a tourist or Rwandan usually fly in or out on individual basis. But he said they would now pay keen interest and document such patients for planning purposes.

“I don’t know if hospitals like King Faisal Hospital in Kigali don’t measure up to the required standards that would provide medical help to locals or foreigners because every day we hear of people flying to Nairobi Hospital or Aga Khan Hospital in Kenya to receive medical attention,” says Ndoli James, a Kigali Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) student, who lost his step mother last November in India to leukemia after local doctors here had failed to diagnose the ailment.

This experience shows that for medical tourism to take root there must be huge investments in the health sector.

We must have the right equipment and medical specialists, especially in those areas where patients have to be flown out for treatment, policy to encourage investment in the sector and other facilities and infrastructure.

We need proper and enough accommodation and hotels, as well as a conducive and accessible transport system and lower cadre workers.

There are over 50 countries, including Mexico, Costa Rica, Germany, Seychelles, the UK, the US, Egypt and Israel, which have identified medical tourism as a national industry.

However, accreditation and other measures of quality vary widely across the globe.

Medical tourism is all about taking advantage of the numerous cost-saving opportunities that exist beyond ones country’s immediate neighbourhood, where there is quality and affordable healthcare.

“Anybody going for treatment will have to spend a few more days at the different destinations, where they have to book hotels before seeking medical attention.

Some may be accompanied by their family members and the fact that those people require accommodation and transport in one way or another sums it up as medical tourism,” says Chris Munyao, the general manager of Primate Safaris in Kigali.

Munyao says the person seeking medical treatment abroad contacts the medical provider and a local tourism operator before travelling.

The medical provider usually requires the patient to provide a medical report, including the nature of ailment, his or her previous doctor’s opinion, medical history and diagnosis.

Certified medical doctors or consultants then advise on the medical treatment. The approximate expenditure, choice of hospitals and tourist destinations, and duration of stay are then discussed.

After signing consent bonds and agreements, the patient is given recommendation letters for a medical visa, to be procured from the concerned recommended country’s embassy.

When the patient travels to the country, the tourism operator assigns a case executive, who takes care of the patient’s accommodation, welfare and transport as he or she seeks medical help.

With a pool of advanced researchers and specialists, medical tourism can be a success in Rwanda.

“Rwandans usually fly out to get treatment for some diseases and disorders like heart complications and cancerous tumors,” says Bella Rukwavu, a Kigali resident, when asked about her views on medical tourism.

“So, if they can get the same services at home, there would be no reason to go abroad. This is a great initiative, but it will need time to be well-established in Rwanda,” she added.

Recently, Dr. Agarwal’s Eye Hospital opened its doors in Kigali, making it the first foreign specialist establishment, which is most likely to become a regional eye referral centre. This would mean that Rwanda would earn more foreign exchange from the patients and caretakers.

“We have spent time with the ministry of health and Rwanda Development Board to see how we can expand this sector because it is quite vital,” said Farooq Siddiqui, the Indian Dr. Argarwal Eye Hospital head of business.

The Asian giant eye facility has so far invested $6m (an estimated Rwf3.8b) with plans to invest more in the next few years.

According to John Nkurikiye, the hospital’s medical director, the specialist hospital handles all complicated eye cases that were hitherto being referred abroad. This will help the country save its hard currency that would have been used abroad.

“The aim of this hospital is to stop any referrals for eye treatment outside Rwanda. We have advanced eye investigational services and a network of over 59 hospitals and a pool of 350 specialists from where we can perform specialised care,” Nkurikiye says.

Therefore, both locals and foreigners can receive medical assistance at the facility.

If more medical tourism facilities are set up in the country and other tourism options are exploited, the figure will significantly rise.

Other popular attractions in Rwanda include gorilla tracking, community and natural tourism, mountaineering, bird and sightseeing and kwita izina (young gorillas naming ceremony).

The new Kigali master plan has earmarked some areas in Kimironko, Gasabo district for tourism activities.

Experts say when medical tourism takes root; it will create thousands of jobs, improve the country’s foreign exchange receipts, boost the healthcare system and expertise and improve the lives of service providers.

“We will need more health workers with specifics skills to handle given medical cases. Besides improving skilled personnel in the country, the move will create job opportunities for many nurses and doctors,” they say.

source: http://www.allafrica.com / by Ben Gasore  / January 22nd, 2013

Nevis poised to become medical tourism destination

Charlestown , Nevis (NIA) :

A leading urologist in the region, Dr Dwayne Thwaites, says Nevis is poised to become a medical tourism destination, given the treatment available in the area of urology and increasing interest by patients outside the island.

In an invited comment during a recent interview, the urology specialist, who has been conducting sponsored urologic screening free of cost for the island’s men over the past four years, explained that the new Urology Suite at the Alexandra Hospital would provide services comparable to any cosmopolitan country.

“There are some places in the Caribbean and the bigger countries they can’t even compare to what we have been doing. We have been having a lot of patients who would fly in from different areas. One, the prices are affordable for the things that we do here and they come from far and wide from Tortola to Dominica… So if we are having these people coming, we can get a suite going and we can do a little bit of medical tourism and bring more people in for some of the stuff that we have…

“I think, the services that we offer here urologically, it’s just amazing for a small island nation. It’s very important because we are very competitive compared to other places. People are coming here for surgery. They are coming to get it done and that’s because we have the facility and we can do these things,” he said.

Thwaites spoke of the services already being offered at the Alexandra Hospital in the area of urology, along with assistance from other members of his volunteer team of urologists.

“We do laser prostates, we do the green light laser, we do lithotripsy. The other day I had one of the ambassadors from St Kitts who was just about to fly to Barbados to get a lithotripsy done and somebody said ‘no they are doing it right here in Nevis’. He was frightened and I said ‘we have been doing this for four to five years’.

“We have done a lot of what we call female urology pelvic flow reconstruction… We have done a lot of paediatric urology and so we have been doing lots and lots of things that most places in the Caribbean all the way down to Trinidad to Barbados to the bigger countries have not been doing,” he said.

Thwaites noted the successes with patients who had undergone urological procedures and the nurses at the hospital who dealt with the urology clinic were instrumental in the achievement.

“We have been very, very successful with the care. The important thing is that we have good nurses. It is amazing how important it is that your nurses are well trained at the things that you do. The Nevisian nurses are very well trained in urological procedures and how to handle these things because most places you go they can’t handle these things.

“You would do them [surgeries] and people would be calling you to figure out what to do next but here, my nurses have been so accustomed to taking care of the patients with urological problems,” he said.

Notwithstanding, the urologist also spoke to the expanded services that would be offered at the suite and long term plans to add services unrelated to urology.

“We are going to be doing fluoroscopy to look at kidney, to look at the different areas and we are going to look at more cystoscopies looking into the bladder. We are going to expand on the laser surgery. We are going to expand a little bit more on the lithotripsy, we are going to get a little bit more machines, we are going to get a little bit more technical and all of these things can be done in one specific area.

“To even go further, the fact that we are bringing in fluoroscopy we can always extend the courtesy of the suite to other specialties. We can end up having orthopaedics come in because we need fluoroscopy for them to set the bone, make sure it is straight and so they can use the facilities. We can have the general surgeons come in to do the colongeograms or whatever… It also accompanies the hospital itself with having another operating room and another facility to do things,” he said.

Thwaites also noted that treatment which involved the heart was another area that could be accommodated in the suite. “The other thing that we are looking into … is for angiograms for the heart, pace maker placement and these kind of things can be done also within the suite.”

“So it’s going to be not just urology major. It’s set up for urology but we can also accommodate a couple other things which are not present right now on the island. So it makes Alexandra one of the first world places, one of the places you can come and get a lot of stuff done and done efficiently and promptly,” he said.

The urological suite will be ready by March/April 2013. Thwaites said progress on the actual construction was completed and the next move would be installation of various pieces of equipment and machinery.

source: http://www.CarribbeanNewsNow.com / Home / Charlestown / January 22nd, 2013

Boosting M’sia’s medical tourism segment

Kuching :

Malaysia is increasingly becoming a major destination for foreigners seeking medical treatment over the past five years, with efforts under way to diversify source markets.

According to the Ministry of Health Malaysia, the first five months of 2012 saw some 236,836 of foreign patients travelling into the country for medical care, spending RM200.4 million in total.

Based on these preliminary figures, the sector was expected to attract over 600,000 foreign patients and generate more than RM600 million in revenues by the end of 2012, Oxford Business Group (OBG) stated in its latest Malaysia Report.

In comparison to the region, Malaysia’s favourable exchange rate and the cost of healthcare services is at an extensively lower cost than that of other countries.

Some surgeries, in particular, are cheaper by half as compared with Singapore or Indonesia.

OBG, however, pointed out that spending by medical tourists was significantly higher than that of other types of visitors in general, medical tourists spent around four times more than their leisure counterparts.

“The medical tourism segment is almost entirely served by private sector health care providers.

“In 2011, facilities in Penang attracted around 49 per cent of total foreign medical revenues, while institutions in KL and the greater Klang Valley attracted 21 per cent of total spending and those in Melaka took in about 10 per cent,” it highlighted.

The government is currently working to boost private sector participation in the industry, with the goal of expanding health care options for Malaysians and attracting a large share of the medical tourism market.

“Incentives aimed at encouraging private participation in the sector include tax exemption for firms that build new hospitals or expand existing hospitals with the goal of attracting more medical tourists, and other tax incentives for companies that obtain accreditations,” it explained.

As of mid-2012, Malaysia was home to eight hospitals with JCI accreditation, including Gleneagles Hospital, the National Heart Institute, the Penang Adventist Hospital and the Sime Darby Medical Centre Subang Jaya.

Additionally, 85 hospitals – 32 of which are private facilities – hold accreditations from the Malaysian Society for Quality in Health.

On the other hand, the Ministry of Health Indonesia had announced a plan in early 2012 to boost accessibility to health care for nationals in an effort to encourage Indonesians to stop travelling abroad for care.

“If this plan comes to fruition, Malaysia could possibily see a decline in its medical tourists from Indonesia, with this likely to have a significant effect on revenue figures.

“With this in mind, Malaysia Healthcare Travel Council is currently working to promote the segment in nearby countries such as Singapore and Japan as well as further afield in burgeoning health care markets including China, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Myanmar and a handful of nations in the Middle East,” it concluded.

source: http://www.TheBorneoPost.com / Home> Business> / by Justin Yap – justinyap@theborneopost.com / Friday, January 18th, 2013

SMS hospital takes lead as Jaipur becomes new medical tourism hub

Jaipur:

Jaipur is emerging as the new medical tourism hub in India, giving tough fight to hospitals of Delhi and Chandigarh.

According to the figures available with the SMS Hospital’s medical records a total of 53,720 patients were given free medicines from the neighbouring states in 2012. While in 2011 the number of such patients given free medicines was 42,480.

Maximum flow of patients is from the state of Haryana, followed by Uttar Pradesh and Gujarat.

SMS Hospital’s Medical Record Officer SP Sharma said that as Haryana is close to Rajasthan, patients of this area come in large numbers to avail the free medicine facility.

Another factor responsible for it is that in Rajasthan, the doctors are easily approachable and moreover patients coming from outside get shelter at resonable price which is not possible in Delhi and Chandigarh, he added.

Dr RC Yadav, President Teaching Faculty said that the increase of patients from the neighbouring states has not only put an extra burden but is also affecting the work efficiency.

He added, the patient flow has increased many folds but the number of doctors remains less.

According to the statistics available from the SMS Hospital, after the free medicine scheme was launched in October 2, 2011 there has been 55 per cent increase in flow of patients all across the state.

On an average the number OPD patient per day after the scheme was launched were 4,814 patients and before that the average flow was 3,323 thus showing an increase of 44.86 per cent.

The flow of indoor patients after the scheme’s announcement was 419 per day while before it was 383 registering an increase of 9.39%. The Hospital registered an overall increase of 55% in the flow of patients.

In 2012 over 18.23 lakh patients had registered in the OPD of the SMS Hospital, said hospital sources. The scheme was launched by Rajasthan government to cater to the poor patients so that free medicines reach all across the state.

source: http://www.DailyBhaskar.com / Home> Rajasthan> Jaipur / DNA, January 17th, 2013

Healthy hotels, rise in ancient therapies expected in 2013

New York:

Healthy hotels, wellness tourism and the holistic medicine system Ayurveda are expected to be the among the top spa trends in 2013, according to a report that tracks the $73 billion global industry.

Gyms, pools and spas are standard at many hotels, but international chains and boutique inns will be enhancing offerings by adding customized services like jogging routes, in-room workouts, sleep programs, and gluten-free and vegan menus.

“Hotels are realizing that as people travel they want to stay healthy,” Susie Ellis, president of SpaFinder Wellness Inc, which compiles the annual forecast report, told journalists.

The InterContinental Hotels Group plans to open a wellness-focused brand hotel called EVEN in New York next year, with 100 more to follow within five years.

“It will be all about health and wellness,” Ellis said of the brand, which will revolve around fitness and include innovative touches such as coat racks that morph into pull-up bars.

Other U.S. hotel chains such as Westin are featuring guided jogs with running concierges and menus stocked with superfoods, according to the report, while Las Vegas’ MGM Grand has designed “Stay Well” rooms with vitamin C-infused showers, wake-up light therapy and air purification and aromatherapy.

Jeremy McCarthy, the director of spa operations for Starwood Hotels and Resorts, said all of his hotels provide jogging routes and are starting to lend running gear to guests.

The SpaFinder Wellness report, which was compiled by about 100 researchers who tracked trends, shows how the industry, which includes as many as 87,000 spas around the world, has shifted from beauty and pampering to health and wellness.

Along with healthy hotels, it predicts an increased demand for authentic Ayurveda, the 3,500 year-old Indian holistic system of medicine, and other ancient treatments.

“Look for more authentic Roman and Turkish baths, Russian banyas (steam rooms ), traditional Chinese medicine and Nordic offerings,” it said.

Traveling abroad

Ellis predicted a surge of people traveling abroad to stay healthy. The report cited India, which has seen a 22 percent annual growth in wellness tourism, as a prime example.

“Traveling for prevention and improving health is going to be huge,” she said.

More men have been going to spas for several years, and that is expected to continue in 2013. In addition to massages, more men are seeking a manicure and pedicure, facials, fillers and so-called “Brotox.”

The trend is fueled by aging baby boomers wanting to hold on to their looks and younger men who are comfortable with the concept of male beauty.

“It’s not just more culturally acceptable for men to spend on looking good, it’s becoming perceived as a necessity,” the report said.

In the United States, research by global company Mintel shows men represent about one in 10 cosmetic-procedure patients, while the number of males seeking cosmetic surgery in Germany has more than doubled in the past five years.

“Even territory once heavily reserved for women, like bikini waxing, is now being invaded by males …” the report said. — Reuters

source: http://www.gmanetwork.com / Home> Lifesytle> Wellness / by Patricia Reaney, Reuters / January 17th, 2013