Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

Health tourism firms hopeful of Russia, US

Problems in the health sectors of large countries such as the U.S. and  Russia may offer the Turkish health tourism industry an increased place in the market, according to sector representatives.

Worldwide health sector representatives were gathered at the Istanbul Health Expo Fair, at which Turkey’s opportunities to rise as a health tourism attraction were discussed.

Many people from the U.S and Russia  have been seeking treatment abroad but Turkey is not on their agenda as much as it could be, according to Filiz Çevirmen, the chairman of the Istanbul Health Tourism Association.

She said Turkey should explain its progress in the health sector by promoting it abroad to increase its market share in the $100 billion sector.

Azita Motoghaddam, chairman of an American  health market consultancy business, also emphasized Turkey’s potential, adding that there was a large deficiency of doctors in the U.S., given the aging population. “In the U.S., an average of 1.6 million people go abroad for treatment every year, spending a total of $19.2 billion. Countries like India  and Thailand are popular destinations, but Turkey has a better infrastructure than these countries,” she said. Lena Kargapoz Tseva, a  Russian  health specialist, complained about the falling health budget in Russia  and said that Russian  citizens were increasingly swerving to alternative countries such as Israel  and Germany.

source: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com / Home> Sub category – Home Page / Istanbul – Anatolian News Agency / January 14th, 2013

Medical tourism regulations relaxed for Chinese visitors

Taipei, Dec. 28 (CNA)

Taiwan has amended regulations on medical tourism in the country to set restrictions on Chinese nationals visiting Taiwan for checkups and cosmetic surgery and change how hospitals will be held responsible for the Chinese customers they cater to.

The set of amended regulations published by the National Immigration Agency on Friday will require medical institutions that sponsor Chinese tourists to visit Taiwan to put up a NT$1 million (US$34,482) guarantee with the agency.

But health care institutions offering medical tourism programs to Chinese nationals will have their businesses suspended for only one month instead of the previously stipulated one year if their Chinese clients overstay their visas.

The agency will also require that Chinese visitors applying to visit Taiwan for medical reasons provide financial statements, which has not been the case in the past.

Chinese visitors must be aged over 20 and have savings of up to NT$200,000 or earn at least NT$50,000 per year to be allowed to get checkups in Taiwan with their blood relatives and spouses, it said.

The regulations, to take effect on Sunday, could help improve the international competitiveness of Taiwan’s medical industry while showing the country’s soft power strength to the world, said Hsieh Li-kung, the agency’s director-general.

source: http://www.focustaiwan.tw / Focus Taiwan News Channel / Home> Society /  By Liu Chien-pang and Maia Huang / December 28th, 2012

Medical Tourism Arrivals to Taiwan up 156% to 100,000 in 2012

Taipei, Dec. 26, 2012 (CENS) :

Taiwan witnessed 100,000 medical tourists this year, far exceeding the goal set at 60,000 and surging 156% from last year’s 39,000, according to Walter Yeh, executive vice president of Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA).

Revenue generated by medical tourism is estimated at NT$70 billion (US$2.33 billion), of which 40% believed by mainland Chinese. Such value is expected to rise a 20% in 2013 and TAITRA hopes Taiwan’s medical tourism can surpass that of South Korea in five years.

Yeh said that the quality of Taiwan’s medical care is very good, but needs to be promoted to international tourists. The Department of Health approves some 40 hospitals and clinics on the island to treat Chinese tourists, with the Taiwan Joint Commission on Hospital Accreditation, a non-profit and non-governmental hospital accreditation agency here, certifies 19 plastic surgery clinics for quality of treatment.

Also 14 Taiwanese hospitals are approved by the Joint Commission International (JCI), a U.S.-based world’s leading health care accreditation agency, Yeh added.

Yeh believes that Taiwan’s medical tourism can outpace S. Korea’s driven by rising mainland Chinese tourists as clients, as well as sizable overseas Chinese in North America and Southeast Asia also looking for quality, cheaper medical care in Taiwan.
For instance, a knee joint can be replaced in Taiwan for about US$15,000 or NT$435,000, but costs in the U.S. or Canada about US$50,000.

Starting in January of this year Taiwan has been offering medical care visa to Chinese mainlanders, and lately TAITRA has been promoting Taiwan’s medical tourism in metropolitan Beijing and Shanghai.

(by Judy Li)

source: http://www.news.cens.com / Home> CENS> Taiwan Economic News> Daily Prime News / December 26th, 2012

Cosmetic surgery common reason for medical tourism

New York:

Nearly a third of people surveyed across the globe say they’re open to traveling abroad to undergo surgical procedures at a lower cost.

The survey, conducted by independent market research company Ipsos on behalf of Reuters News, may reflect the perception of superior medical care in other countries, Nicolas Boyon, senior vice president of Ipsos Public Affairs, told Reuters .

A report from the  Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which ranked cosmetic surgery among the most common reasons for medical travel, cites the trend as being driven by the lower cost of treatments available in less-developed countries combined with cheaper flights and a steady rise in Web-based services and travel brokers.

Thirty-eight percent of Americans said they would consider medical tourism and 66 percent of respondents from Italy said they would definitely or probably consider medical tourism. In Canada, 48 percent of those surveyed would consider traveling for surgery, while 41 percent in Canada said the same.

The Ipsos poll  also noted that adults under age 35 and those ages 35 to 49 were more likely (34 percent collectively) than patients ages 50 to 64 (15 percent) to travel for medical purposes. Men (19 percent) were slightly more likely than women (17 percent) to travel for procedures.

The survey included respondents from Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Turkey and the United States.

source: http://www.modernmedicine.com / Home / by Heather Onorati / Cosmetic Surgery Times eNews Newsletter

Medical tourism faces credibility crisis

Hospitals face tougher penalties for dealing with unregistered agencies
Hospitals that attract people through unregistered medical tourism agencies will be banned from accepting foreign patients for the next two years, according to the Ministry of Health and Welfare.

The ministry said Tuesday that it is promoting the revision of medical regulations to toughen punishments on hospitals that have deals with unregistered agencies in medical services for foreigners.

The measure follows a growing number of complaints from medical tourists, especially Chinese, who come to Korea to receive medical treatment through unregistered middlemen. Under current regulations, only registered medical tourism agencies can attract foreign clients.

“In many such cases, middlemen overcharge patients, luring them with exaggerated ads. They also tell hospitals that they will attract foreign patients and instead demand 30-70 percent of the medical fees as commission. Some hospitals in financial difficulties or newly opened clinics accept such offers, and the quality of the treatment is not guaranteed,” a ministry official said.

“We are seeking countermeasures because treatments through illegal brokerage may make foreigners lose trust in Korea’s medical services, consequently dealing a serious blow to Korea’s medical tourism,” she said.

For such hospitals, the government will cancel their license to attract foreign patients even through registered agencies. They will also be banned from obtaining the license for two years afterward.

Hospitals are required to obtain a license if they want to attract foreign patients through agencies. They don’t need one if they don’t have business with such agencies.

The ministry will also encourage associations of hospitals or medical tourism agencies to set up their own guidelines against illegal acts in order to boost the credibility of the nation’s entire medical tourism subsector.

“We’ll also encourage hospitals to give the receipt for medical fees to the patients or their families, not to the agencies,” she said.

As a related measure, the government plans to have 10,000 “global healthcare experts” by 2020 including nurses and interpreters specializing in medical treatment interpretation.

Starting next year, a state-run qualification test system will be adopted for medical tour coordinators who provide foreign patients with general information on treatment and hospital systems. The ministry will also allow more Korean-speaking foreigners to work as coordinators by easing regulations, but they will also have to take the qualification test.

The ministry is also considering adopting another license for interpreters specializing in medical treatment. It will also help hospitals and colleges make agreement on having graduates majoring in specific languages, such as Arabic and Russian, to be hired at the hospitals as interpreters.

The government also seeks to link medical tourism with regular tourism programs. “A medical visa will be issued to not only patients but also people who attend on them, such as family members, starting December. We’ll also develop a debit card with which the patients and the family can get discount on transportation, shopping, tour and medical fees,” she said

rahnita@koreatimes.co.kr

source: http://www.koreatimes.co.kr / Home> National< Briefs / by Kim Rahn / November 27th, 2012