Category Archives: Travelling For Surgery Abroad / Medical Surgery Overseas

Thailand remains attractive to tourists from Qatar

ThaiAmbassadorCT13sept2015

Thai Ambassador Piroon Laismit says Bangkok is normal after last month’s bombing.

Last month’s bombing incident in Thailand’s Erawan shrine will not affect the influx of tourists from Qatar, especially during Eid al-Adha, ambassador Piroon Laismit has said.
“In the beginning, many people were stunned by the incident but they should not worry anymore because police are on top of the situation and the necessary investigations are ongoing,” he told Gulf Times.
Similar to conditions after the May 2014 protest actions, Laismit said tourism activity in Bangkok had normalised just a few days after a bomb blast killed 22 persons and injured 120 others at the popular Hindu shrine.
Records from the Thai embassy showed 31,534 tourists from Qatar visited Thailand in 2014. Out of last year’s total figures, 23,052 were Qataris while 8,482 were Qatar-based expatriates, who applied for visas from Doha.
“From January to July this year, the embassy processed 5,000 visa applications for expatriates. For the same period, 17,429 Qataris had already visited Thailand.
“We are expecting an additional 10,000 tourists from Qatar to visit Thailand from September until the end of the year,” Laismit noted.
He stressed that the embassy cannot provide the exact number of tourists from Qatar since some expatriates like the British, Americans, Japanese, and other tourists from Southeast Asian countries are not required to present visas in Thailand.
According to Laismit, Thailand is attractive to most Qataris for its medical tourism industry. “Many Qataris see Thailand as a medical hub and they have a high regard for the services of our medical practitioners, who were trained and schooled abroad. Their services are efficient,” he explained.
“Because of our medical tourism industry, Qataris go to Thailand all year round. But the peak season for both Qataris and expats is during summer and Eid holidays.”
Aside from medical tourism, Laismit said Qataris also visit Thailand’s many tourist destinations. “We have an abundance of tropical fruits and Arabic food, as well as a range of international cuisine. The cost of living is low and transportation services are convenient making it conducive for tourists to travel to our shrines and cultural sites,” the ambassador said.
According to Laismit, Thailand received a total of 26mn tourists in 2014. “We are targeting to get 28mn visitors this year. Currently, 24.5mn tourists have already arrived in Thailand. Hopefully, by year’s end we could meet our target,” he said.

source: http://www.gulf-times.com / Gulf Times / Home> Qatar / by Peter Alagos, Business Reporter / September 12th, 2015

Khader bats for visa on arrival for med tourists

Mangaluru :

The department of health and family welfare will press for visa on arrival for tourists at Mangaluru International Airport (MIA) with the Union ministries of external affairs and civil aviation in a bid to boost tourism in Dakshina Kannada, and Udupi.

This facility will draw tourists to various areas in Karnataka and medical tourism could benefit a lot, minister for health and family welfare UT Khader said here on Saturday. “We can leverage our strength in medicine – modern and ancient – to draw tourists and their numbers can be increased by having visa on arrival,” he said.

Inaugurating the Yenepoya Ayush Centre, Khader said health tourism has a major potential to draw tourists. Citing his recent visit to Kaup in neighbouring Udupi, Khader said an ayurvedic treatment centre there had attracted Russians.

Khader said he’ll have discussions with heads of various medical institutions in the two districts. “While drawing tourists to health facilities in the two districts is one issue, it’s also important for hospitals to give them the necessary infrastructure,” he said. Hospitals should provide rooms and other facilities that meet the expectations of tourists.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Mangaluru / TNN / August 23rd, 2015

Big need for biomed engineers

biomedCT26jul2015

The medical and healthcare sector will see a greater need for professionals in the biomedical field, since it is poised to grow and generate even more revenue in the years to come.

BIOMEDICAL engineers in developing countries have been in high demand because of the massive growth in the healthcare sector.

Graduates who are well-equipped with biomedical engineering knowledge play key roles in meeting challenges and making significant contributions in various healthcare related professions; for example, in clinical applications, manufacturing and production industry, medical act regulations, and research and development of medical devices.

The facts presented by the Health Ministry in 2012 show that there were 138 government hospitals and 220 private hospitals as well as many different clinics and home care centres in Malaysia.

A sum of RM23bil was allocated by the government to the healthcare sector in 2015 as operating and development expenditure.

With the promotion of medical tourism in Malaysia, the Malaysian-German Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MGCC) estimates that there will be around two million medical tourists by 2029 and this is expected to generate 10% of the annual revenue growth for the Malaysian economy.

To accommodate the huge numbers of medical tourists, hospitals are expected to recruit more professionals such as doctors, specialists, nurses and biomedical engineers.

CT26jul2015

Some high-technology medical equipment such as the computerised tomography (CT) scanner, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine, operating theatre equipment and intensive care unit equipment, require professionally trained biomedical engineers to properly maintain the functionality and quality of the equipment.

The employment of biomedical engineers can help to reduce maintenance costs for the hospitals. Biomedical engineers can assist in setting up proper practices on usage and maintenance that would ensure good performance of the equipment parts for a longer lifetime and more hassle-free maintenance.

Development of the medical engineering industry requires the support of professional biomedical engineers.

A survey presented by the Selangor State Investment Centre Berhad indicated that the current estimated market value for Malaysian medical devices is RM3.7bil (US$1.2bil) which is only equivalent to about 1% of the total market in the United States (US).

The statistics indicate that there is still a large market share on medical devices that are unexplored in Malaysia.

Another survey conducted by the Association of Malaysian Medical Industries (AMMI) states that there are about 180 medical device manufacturers in Malaysia including some major foreign multinational corporations (MNCs).

They are involved in high value medical products such as orthopedic products, dialysers, surgical instruments, medical electrodes, and others.

It shows that the engineering-support industry in Malaysia is capable of producing quality products and solutions to meet the stringent requirements of the medical devices industry.

Some of them are for instance, sutures by Vigilenz Medical Devices Sdn Bhd, spinal implants and joint replacement products by Straits Orthopaedics (Mfg) Sdn Bhd and hospital beds by LKL Advance Metaltech Sdn Bhd.

With the growing national interest on quality medical services and production of support equipment, the role of biomedical engineers is expected to increase significantly.

Regulations

Regulatory affairs are always a must for ensuring the safety of medical devices.

In 2011, the Malaysian Parliament approved the Medical Device Act 2012 (Act 737). As part of the effort from the Malaysian government on regulating medical devices, the Medical Devices Bureau (MDB) was established in September 2005 to develop and implement the medical devices regulatory programme.

Under the Act, the MDB is given the authority to regulate the various ranges of medical devices including pre-market, placement on the market, post-market, usage and disposal.

The Malaysian medical devices regulatory framework endorsed by MDB is based on the global harmonisation trend as promoted by the Global Harmonisation Task Force, Asian Harmonisation Working Party and Medical Device Product Working Group of the Asean Consultative Committee for Standards and Quality and supported by the World Health Organisation.

Before the products are marketed, biomedical engineers are expected to carry out risk analysis and clinical evaluation at the design and development stage.

This is to ensure the parameters of devices are compliant with the safety standards and risk acceptance criteria.

For the post-market surveillance, with recognised engineering competency, the biomedical engineers are to conduct investigations in identifying and determining the root cause of the problematic medical devices and to provide advice and remedial action for improving the design of medical devices.

With the Act and with the relevant authorities in charge of certification of the medical equipment, we expect more biomedical engineers to provide support in these areas. In addition, biomedical engineers can opt for research and development.

A lot of clinical needs and patient-related problems require multi-disciplinary knowledge in order to develop sustainable and unique solutions to assist clinicians in providing an efficient and effective treatment to patients.

One common example is the treatment of cardiovascular disease that requires implantable devices such as a pacemaker or stent to restore the heart function.

The effort to guarantee the functionality, efficiency, biocompatibility and safety of the device before implantation, and after implantation, require knowledge and methods in engineering and biomedical science, which is exactly the scope of study in biomedical engineering.

Government incentives

The Malaysian government in fact, has given more than 50% tax allowance as incentives for research and development (R&D).

However, there is still not much funds allocated for R&D on medical devices despites calls from those in the medical industry.

In this aspect, academicians from universities who are aware of the clinical needs and inadequacies can take the lead in research and development of medical devices for improvements.

Universiti Malaya with another four public research universities have set up the biomedical engineering programme. Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (UTAR) has also established a biomedical engineering programme to ensure enough graduates are available to support the biomedical engineering and human resource requirements of the industry and for research.

Devices used in diagnosis, monitoring, and therapy are developed based on the principles and fundamentals of medical science and engineering, by biomedical engineers.

They can help develop diagnostic instrumentations and explore new materials to be used for implantation.

The current research strengths of Malaysian universities focus on the following fields: Prosthesis and orthosis, regulations, signal processing, tissue engineering, MEMS, cardiovascular devices, medical imaging, biofluid modelling , bioinformatics, brain-computer interface.

Another research topic for biomedical engineers to explore is rehabilitation especially for the benefit of the disabled population.

A total number of 277,509 disabled Malaysians with various disabilities had registered with the Department of Social Welfare and only a small percentage of them are employed in the public and private sectors.

Disabled people have less chances of contributing their abilities to the workplace.

Biomedical engineers should explore how to develop a technological solution and invent devices for disabled people to regain their physical body functions and how to improve their quality of life. By doing so, disabled people will rebuild their confidence and continue to contribute to national development. The integration of medical science and engineering to revolutionalise healthcare in the developing world is the duty of biomedical engineers.

According to the report published by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (Unescap), Malaysia is predicted to have an ageing population by 2030, in which 15% of the populations will be the elderly.

With a growing elderly population and quality device servicing needs, a more sustainable healthcare technology solution is needed to cope with the high living cost.

Biomedical engineers can design and develop solutions to address these shortages of the current healthcare system. With the promising outlook, we can foresee that sustainable and affordable healthcare solution will be the next challenge for biomedical engineering to meet the demands of the transformation of Malaysia into a developed country in 2020.

Dr Tan Lee Fan is an Assistant Professor in Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman’s Department of Mechatronics and Biomedical Engineering, while Lee Kong Chian is with the Faculty of Engineering and Science. This is a series of articles on Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics from Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman.

source: http://www.thestar.com.my / The Star Online / Home> News> Education / Sunday – July 26th, 2015

RAK’s medical tourism plan coming to fruition and looks to wow Bollywood stars

RAK Hospital, which has a hair salon and spa, started treating patients from abroad for a range of complex issues, from neurosurgery to cancer and cardiac surgeries, five years ago. Pawan Singh / The National

RAK Hospital, which has a hair salon and spa, started treating patients from abroad for a range of complex issues, from neurosurgery to cancer and cardiac surgeries, five years ago. Pawan Singh / The National

Ras Al Khaimah :

It has been 11 years since the northernmost emirate began a project to become a destination for medical tourism. While the sector has grown, with the luxury, hotel-style RAK Hospital receiving about 150 patients from abroad each month, there is still work to be done, according to doctors.

“We wanted to combine the hotel and hospitality concept with medical tourism,” said Dr Raza Siddiqui, head of the Arabian Healthcare Group, which, along with the emirate’s ruler, Sheikh Saud bin Saqr Al Qasimi, helped to develop the idea of medical tourism in RAK, inspired by Swiss and American systems.

“The idea was that the hospital should also look after the needs of the local population,” said Dr Siddiqui. “In the first two years we focused on this, making sure the local community no longer had to travel abroad for treatment.”

Attracting patients from other emirates in certain fields of medicine remains a challenge. “For people from Abu Dhabi, from Dubai, it might not be the ideal choice to come to RAK for treatment,” said Dr Siddiqui. “To optimise the market, we realised we had to step outside the UAE.”

Five years ago RAK Hospital began treating patients from abroad for a range of complex issues, from neurosurgery to cancer and cardiac surgeries.

Outreach offices in countries including Iraq, Afghanistan, Nigeria, Pakistan and Bahrain allow doctors to follow up with patients after surgery is complete and they have returned home.

The 70-bed facility, which has a hair salon and spa, will be doubled in size as part of expansion plans over the next six months, which will also increase the number of intensive-care beds to 36.

“We haven’t yet ventured into cosmetic surgery but it’s very profitable,” Dr Siddiqui said. “The next stage is to focus on Bollywood stars, the rich and fa mous, where they can come and stay in the local resorts, charter planes here, do the surgery and nobody will know them.

“They can be discreet and be in a place where people will just think they’re holidaymakers.”

RAK Hospital’s chief executive and head of surgery, Dr Jean-Marc Gauer, came from Switzerland to work on the project. Being an hour from Dubai airport is a big advantage, he said. “A person from Dubai would be more hesitant to come here than would a person from a country such as Ethiopia,” Dr Gauer said. “It’s a challenge to bring the domestic population here.”

Perceptions of RAK as a destination and a healthcare provider are slowly changing as awareness increases, said Dr Anup Kumar Panigrahi, head of the hospital’s keyhole and bariatric surgery teams. “When we go to Dubai for conferences now, people have heard of RAK Hospital,” he said. “Three years ago it wasn’t the case. Now, it’s on the map.”

About 30 to 40 per cent of his laparoscopy patients come from Dubai because of a lack of such specialists in the emirate.

Dr Siddiqui said a good relationship with the tourism industry, travel agents and tour operators was key to taking the project further. “When we go to other countries, the first people we partner with are the travel agents,” he said. “They play a very important role.”

mswan@thenational.ae

source:  http://www.thenational.ae / The National, UAE / Home> UAE> Arts & Lifestyle / by Melanie Swan / July 10th, 2015

Filipino surgeon builds beauty empire

A Filipino cosmetic surgeon has built a new facility that promotes non-invasive aesthetic procedures to enhance physical features, using the patient’s own body fat.

Dr. Alfredo Callanta provides personal and face-to-face consultation with a patient at Empire Centre for Regenerative Medicine.’

Dr. Alfredo Callanta provides personal and face-to-face consultation with a patient
at Empire Centre for Regenerative Medicine.’

Dr. Alfredo Callanta, a world- renowned plastic, reconstructive and aesthetic surgeon, is an expert in the field of non-surgical fat grafting for facial and bodily rejuvenation.

With Singaporean partners sinking in at least $1 million, Callanta and his partners established Empire Center for Regenerative Medicine, considered as the pioneer in minimally invasive cosmetic treatments.

“Empire is committed to providing highly specialized procedures to people in and around the globe who have the preference for non-invasive treatments at relatively no downtime at less than normal fees other medical facilities overseas charge,” says Callanta.

Empire, located in the business district of Quezon City, began operations in 2014 and has since then become a go-to place for cosmetic procedures in the Philippines, helping drive the growth of medical tourism.

The facility’s popularity has encouraged foreign tourists to flock into the country to undergo cosmetic procedures.

The fat grafting procedure is the facility’s most popular cosmetic treatment that allows patients to ‘roll back’ the years lost through a technique using their own fat.

The use of fat is also fast becoming the procedure of choice for women looking to enhance their body such as  the breasts or the butt, says Callanta.

“There is definitely a growing demand for regenerative medicine here in the region and cosmetic surgery continues to be an ever-evolving industry here in the Philippines,” Callanta says.

He cites the results of recent studies showing that fat has the highest potential to stimulate the growth of stem cells.

In one of his seminars abroad, Callanta met fellow plastic surgeon Dr. Roger Amar, who created the so-called fat autograft muscle injection fat graft technique. FAMI fat graft  seeks to restore the lost volume by utilizing fat from the patient’s body.

The technique is touted as a very specialized discipline that only a select group of surgeons across the globe are proficient in it, each handpicked by Amar himself. Callanta is the only one in Asia that is able to administer the FAMI technique.

Callanta holds a degree in Medicine from the University of Sto. Tomas and has done his internship and residency at the Capitol Medical Center in Quezon City where he became chief resident for general surgery.

Empire Centre for Regenerative Medicine opens its doors to patients from all over the world who seek minimally invasive cosmetic treatments.

Empire Centre for Regenerative Medicine opens its doors to patients from all
over the world who seek minimally invasive cosmetic treatments.

Empire offers select rejuvenation processes to restore the natural tautness of facial, breast and butt muscles that are normally subject to lack of elasticity and firmness as part of the aging process.

The facility offers butt augmentation via fat graft, which is commonly referred to as the ‘Brazilian Butt Lift’ and has been a procedure gaining fast popularity.

This procedure is more tricky as it requires the procedure to be in proportion to other body parts.

Callanta, a pioneer in facial rejuvenation process, also noticed that traditional facelift which usually cuts off excess or sagging skin is not aesthetically pleasing as observed by more discerning clients.

“The method oftentimes results in stiff and somewhat overstretched look of the facial skin. Our facial rejuvenation procedure is very natural with surprisingly less down time,” he says.

He says Empire clients can undergo a procedure on a Friday and come back to work on a Monday, after three to six hours of non-invasive procedure.

Even young people in teens and young adults have come to embrace the technology of cosmetic procedures to enhance their physical appearance, he says.

“What needs to be understood is that our hospitals and medical clinics are already at par with top-notch institutions in Europe and America when it comes to cosmetic procedures. A lot of doctors, if not most, are internationally trained with extensive experience in their respective medical fields,” he says.

“I have been doing cosmetic procedures for more than a decade now and each patient I have is a testament to how effective, safe, and reliable fat grafting is. The Philippines has so much potential in this particular medical field and we at Empire are positive that the local medical tourism will continue to grow in the coming years,” he says.

He says the Philippines has emerged as one of Asia’s most advanced nations in the field of healthcare. With many countries offering advanced healthcare services, the competitive edge of the Philippines is its lower cost, he says.

“We will soon be the hub in aesthetic medical procedures in the region. I’m quite positive that we have the perfect blend of expertise and pricing that will, all the more encourage people to come to the Philippines and have their procedures here,” says Callanta.

source: http://www.manilastandardtoday.com / The Standard / Home> Business / by Other V. Campos / July 04th, 2015