Dr Prem Jagyasi to Conduct Two-Day Certificate Workshop on Medical Tourism in June 2012

Posted on 19 May 2012 in Uncategorized by admin

Constellation Communications & Events, an Indian arm of Lifeline Healthcare, Dubai is organizing a Two Day Certificate Program for medical tourism professionals at the Hotel Holiday Inn in Mumbai on June 1-2, 2012.

Constellation Communications & Events has roped in speaker, trainer, and chartered consultant Dr Prem Jagyasi to conduct this workshop.

The timings for the workshop will be from 10 AM – 5 PM and the fee for the workshop is Rs 10,000,

This Course aims to provide numerous benefits for the tourism sector including an opportunity to understand,the connecting thread between Tourism & Medical Tourism industry.

Marketing and branding tips for organisations among the right audiences, learning key strategies while making marketing plan for better business development through international patients travelling to India.

An pportunity to meet hospitals and medical tourism companies to understand the feasibility of joint venture with them, gain insights on legal & ethical issues involved in Medical Tourism as well as learn how to overcome the challenges involved in business development while dealing with international patients.

http://www.travelbizmonitor.com/dr-prem-jagyasi-to-conduct-twoday-certificate-workshop-on-medical-tourism-in-june-2012-16499

Medical Tourism Resource Online

Medical Tourism Rising In The UAE

Posted on 27 March 2012 in Uncategorized by admin

Hospitals and healthcare hubs in the UAE are increasingly looking abroad to attract patients and boost a small but growing medical- tourism sector here.

Revenue in the UAE’s Medical Tourism market amounted to about US$1.7 billion (Dh6.24bn) in 2010, and the sector is projected to grow by about 15 per cent annually, according to the market research firm Business Monitor International.

Dubai Healthcare City is planning to create centres for oncology, genetic disorders and diabetes within five years in an effort to expand the medical-tourism segment of its business.

About 15 per cent of more than 500,000 patients who sought care there last year were medical tourists, up from just 5 per cent of 231,000 patients in 2009.

Over the past year, RAK Hospital has been opening small offices in countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Ethiopia and Nigeria to find out more about the kinds of patients who are travelling abroad for treatment.

It has also been putting together its own treatment packages that include airline tickets, visitor visas and negotiated rates at partner hotels near its base in Ras Al Khaimah.

“UAE has tremendous potential to come up as the next important medical-tourism destination for the people of this region,” said Raza Siddiqui, the executive director of RAK Hospital.

While the medical tourism service started last year still makes up a small part of RAK Hospital’s business, it now attracts one or two patients each day. Mr Siddiqui said the hospital plans to open offices in Russia, Pakistan, Kenya and Uganda to expand this business further.

At the same time, healthcare facilities in the UAE are working to keep local patients from travelling elsewhere for treatment – and boosting the medical-tourism sector of competing countries.

“One of the challenges that the UAE faces is stiff competition from popular medical destinations such as India and South East Asia that also provide competitive medical care,” said Dr Ayesha Abdullah, the executive director of Dubai Healthcare City.

“Another challenge is many patients still prefer to get medical care outside the UAE.”

Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, which is scheduled to open on Sowwah Island next year, is encouraging local residents to seek treatment there while it also tries to attract medical tourists.

It plans to use certain amenities such as a climate-controlled walkway that connects to a nearby luxury hotel to entice patients to its facilities.

“The primary purpose of bringing the Cleveland Clinic model of care to Abu Dhabi is to provide those patients who might otherwise go abroad for treatment to places like Cleveland in Ohio with the highest international standards of health care in their home country [of the UAE],” said Dr Marc Harrison, the chief executive of Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi.

“The hospital is designed primarily to cater to the needs of patients in Abu Dhabi and other emirates in the UAE, but we will, of course, welcome patients from the wider region.”

A greater challenge for UAE hospitals may be accounting for healthcare policies in the home countries of potential medical tourists.

For instance, some jurisdictions may not approve drugs or treatment methods that are offered in the Emirates, while certain doctors may be reluctant to treat patients who have received elective care here or elsewhere.

“The issues in a universal healthcare system are different than in jurisdictions with a patient pay structure,” said Dino Wilkinson, a partner based in Abu Dhabi at the law firm Norton Rose.

http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/industry-insights/economics/medical-tourism-rising-in-the-uae

Medical Tourism Resource Online

Steps to strengthen medical tourism in Kerala

Posted on 31 December 2011 in Uncategorized by admin
Steps to strengthen medical tourism in Kerala

spacer Steps to strengthen medical tourism in Kerala
As part of the efforts to develop Kerala into an international destination, Government of Kerala and Kerala Tourism are identifying new areas of development. Recognizing the scope and potential of medical tourism in Kerala, the State government is ready to promote medical tourism in the 12th Five Year Plan. Kerala is yet to make use of its full potential to emerge as a medical tourism destination in India.

The scope of medical tourism is high and Kerala can give quality health care packages at affordable rates to tourists. Development of basic infrastructure and hygienic conditions are initial steps implemented by the government for the growth of medical tourism sector in Kerala.

Kerala Tourism road shows a big hit in Australia
spacer Steps to strengthen medical tourism in Kerala
Portuguese Ambassador visits Muziris

 

http://www.keralatourism.org/news/219/medical-tourism.php

MMedsolution Medical Tourism Resource On-line

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'New Delhi Superbug’ – ‘Named’ to kill Indian Medical Tourism

Posted on 16 August 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

Naming of a new superbug after the name of Indian capital by a UK based research team, is seen as a move to scare the UK patients from India while hospital acquire infection rates in UK itself , especially MRSA, continue to be alarming.

Within few days of India’s top IT outsourcing company Infosys was called ‘Chop Shop’ by a US senator, a UK infection control research team led by Prof Timothy Walsh, in a study published in Lancet, has dropped another bombshell by naming a new Superbug gene NDM-1 after the name of Indian capital, as ‘New Delhi metallo- lactamase-1’ and blaming Indian Medical Tourism industry especially Cosmetic Surgery centres for its worldwide spread.

“This act of naming Superbug after New Delhi, while none of the samples collected was from Delhi and its presence in UK itself indigenously, appears a ‘Racially’ and commercially motivated act to malign Indian Medical tourism sector.” said Dr K M Kapoor, Senior Consultant, Cosmetic Surgery at Fortis Hospital, Mohali and a Medical Tourism exponent in India.

The charge of the name being racially biased gets all the more credence as Prof Timothy Walsh had reported a similar, but far more dangerous Superbug from an infection outbreak in a hospital in Houston, Texas in 2006. This bug was named VIM 7 rather than being called ‘Houston Superbug’ and was never publicized much. VIM 7 was more dangerous than NDM 1 as it was resistant to all the drugs except Polymyxin B while NDM-I is susceptible to Tigecyclin and Colistin.

I3-IRG researcher Prof Timothy Walsh, PhD, who is still in the process of obtaining his MRCPath (London) and DSc (Australia) had earlier also resorted to publicity gimmicks to draw world’s attention to his pet topic of Metallo-?-Lactamase gene, but failed to do so in his previous attempts. This time by deliberately naming the ‘Superbug’ after New Delhi and implicating India’s burgeoning Cosmetic Surgery tourism industry for its spread, he has raised a big controversy and has managed to get all the attention.

Moreover the credibility of this study suffers from another account as this study has been funded by EU, Wellcome and Wyeth, with Wyeth being the manufacturer of Tigecyclin, one of the two drugs effective against NDM 1. The lead author has reported receiving a travel grant from Wyeth and another author has reported holding or managing shares in AstraZeneca, Merck, Pfizer, Dechra, GlaxoSmithKline, and Eco Animal Health.

By creating a false scare and a doomsday scenario, Prof Timothy Walsh is trying to gain international limelight .The proof of how serious is the threat, of NDM 1 gene, can be had from the excerpts of a press release from Hong Kong’s public Health Dep’t. ‘ According to test results of Public Health Laboratory Services Branch (PHLSB), there was one isolate of E. coli harbouring NDM-1 in a 66-year-old male patient attending a government out-patient clinic in October 2009.The organism was however susceptible to oral antibiotic agents commonly used to treat urinary tract infection, the spokesman said. The patient fully recovered.’ . In this case patient has recovered even after contracting the ‘dreaded’ NDM-1 E Coli infection.

Prof Timothy Walsh had earlier also tried to create scare with this Super bug theory in 2004 through his article , titled ‘Metallo-ß-Lactamases: the Quiet before the Storm?’.The ‘ Quiet before storm’ has lasted well for over 6 years now without a major international outbreak and now Prof Timothy Walsh is again back with his pet topic, trying to serve the same old wine in a new bottle.

UK’s own record in infection control is dismal and high infection rates due to ‘MRSA Superbug’ are driving patients abroad to safer destinations. The EARSS (European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System) monitors antimicrobial resistance in Europe. It maintains a comprehensive surveillance and information system that provides comparable and validated data on the prevalence and spread of major invasive bacteria such as MRSA. Its 2002 data shows that in UK hospitals, 44.5 % of Staph infections were of MRSA type, carrying 15 % mortality.

In a report ‘Superbug fear drives NHS patients abroad’ written by Sophie Goodchild, Health Editor , London Evening Standard on 11th March 2008, it has been mentioned ‘About 22,000 people in the capital and 100,000 from UK went overseas for surgery and dental treatment last year – a rise of nearly a quarter on 2006. Fear over infection from superbugs is now a major reason for them opting to go private instead of receiving treatment on the NHS. More than half of surgery patients said they were worried about contracting an infection such as MRSA in a British hospital. This comes a day after the Evening Standard revealed more than nine patients a week are dying from hospital acquired infections. The findings are published by research group Treatment Abroad from its international medical tourist survey.’

Another report had quoted- Keith Pollard, a director of Treatment Abroad, a website on medical tourism, told the media: “We are getting reports that worries about hospital infections such as MRSA are driving people abroad.” Katherine Murphy, of the Patients Association, said: “Hospital infections are the number one concern from callers to our helpline. It comes as no surprise that some people are going abroad because they’re frightened of NHS infection rates in this country. The government is not doing anything to reassure the public, particularly when we know key people are being lost from hospital infection posts and cleaning budgets are being cut”.

High costs and fear of UK Superbug, MRSA, led to the growth of outbound medical tourism from UK with India as one of the top beneficiary. As per a study by treatment abroad , in 2006, for cosmetic surgery procedures like Breast augmentation, tummy tuck, liposuction and facelift , around 14,500 patients traveled outside the UK, spending around £3,500 each, creating an estimated market worth £50 million(cosmetic surgery getting 31% of total market share). This trend has been increasing rapidly since then.

Dr K M Kapoor also shared story of one of his patients from UK, a leading glamour model, Toni Samantha Wildish, who underwent a Breast Implant surgery in Czechoslovakia and contracted a major infection in right breast during surgery and was discharged and sent back after 3 days.

By the time, she reached back home in UK after 5 days, she had started developing features of septicemia. She was taken up for emergency surgery and her right breast implant was removed, leaving her with asymmetric breasts. This left her with no option to look for a better place outside Europe and finally she was operated successfully in India at Fortis Hospital, Mohali by Dr K M Kapoor.

Her previous left side breast implant was also removed and a new set of implants were placed to put her modeling career back on track. “Why this case was not much publicized by ‘Infections from other countries’ experts like Prof Timothy Walsh could be anybody’s guess but one reason could be that Czechoslovakia is part of EU” said Dr Kapoor.

By Implicating Indian Cosmetic Surgery industry for the spread of NDM- 1 gene, without any substantial supporting evidence, this UK based research team is trying to help UK’s floundering Cosmetic Surgery market due to popularity of less expensive and safer Asian destinations like India, Thailand, Malaysia etc, amongst UK population. It is important to note that while samples were collected from India, Pakistan and UK, the bacteria gene was deliberately named after New Delhi.

The reasons are not very far to see as India in recent years has risen to become one of the top medical tourism destinations in Cosmetic Surgery. The same bacteria could have been named ‘Islamabad bug’ but as Pakistan is not yet a significant player in Medical Tourism, so it was spared.

Cosmetic Surgery, one of the safest surgical specialties, is the biggest contributor to the medical tourism revenues in India. The UK team had reasons to discredit India’s dominance in the field of Medical Tourism as western medical industry has started seeing Asian countries led by India as their major competitors and fear that Medical outsourcing industry could go the IT way.

They have found a potent weapon in the form of NDM-1 to win their patients from India by scaring them with this superbug. Dr K M Kapoor, while concluding said, “It is high time Indian government takes a tough stand on this issue to protect its medical tourism industry and asks the UK govt for a clarification & removal of word ‘New Delhi’ from the name of this Superbug.”

source: Punjab Newsline Network

Delhi's rich heritage, swanky biz hubs big draw for foreigners

Posted on 20 April 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

NEW DELHI: Delhi with its rich heritage sites, modern healthcare centres and swanky business hubs emerged as the favourite destination among foreign tourists including business travellers in 2008, a study has revealed.

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Singapore to Emerge as Key Medical Tourism Destination

Posted on 9 April 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

Singapore represents Asia’s second largest medical tourism market after Thailand. The country is well known for quality medicine, state-of-the art medical care, and meticulous healthcare workers.

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How India’s key industry players are set to capitalise on the forthcoming Commonwealth Games and beyond?

Posted on 8 March 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

The spotlight will be firmly on India in 2010 as the country is set to welcome an estimated 100,000 visitors for the Delhi 2010 Commonwealth Games (3-14 October).

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IWHTA supports International Medical Tourism & Travel 2010

Posted on 22 February 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

Edison, USA, February 16, 2010 —International Wellness and Healthcare Travel Association (IWHTA) president Mr. Naresh Jadeja, an expert on medical tourism trends and patient’s perspective is to address at a Singapore Health Ministry supported ‘International Medical Tourism and Travel 2010’ conference.

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Healthcare Costs Need to be Controlled in the UAE

Posted on 19 February 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

DUBAI — The rapidly developing healthcare sector in the UAE faces challenges to its long-term sustainability due to the relatively high cost of medical provision, according to a recent report.

Competitor countries, particularly in Southeast Asia, have already established a strong reputation for quality, low-cost healthcare provision, and therefore have significant first-mover advantages compared to the UAE, according to “Transforming the Middle East’s healthcare model,” a recently published research report by Grant Thornton.

Commenting on the report, Farouk Mohamed, Managing Partner, Grant Thornton UAE, highlighted the need for cost rationalisation in the country’s healthcare sector, pointing out that the average cost of a heart bypass surgery in the UAE stood at $44,000, compared with an average of $18,500 in Singapore, $11,000 in Thailand, $10,000 in India and $9,000 in Malaysia.

“While the cost of healthcare provision in the UAE compares very favourably with most Western markets,” said Mohamed, “the long-term development of the country’s medical tourism sector remains extremely price-dependent. That is especially true during a period of global economic instability and relatively low levels of consumer confidence, worldwide and here in the Middle East.”

According to Dr Prem Jagyasi, a renowned healthcare consultant, high quality healthcare services with affordability are not a privilege, but the right of the people. “Healthcare should be affordable for every person,” he adds.

Citing the example of the US, Dr Jagyasi, who is also the Managing Director and CEO of ExHealth said that almost 50 million people are uninsured and 250 million are underinsured due to costly healthcare.

He said though low cost played an important role in medical tourism, other factors existed as well. “For instance in Canada and UK, healthcare is available but not easy accessible. In many countries, high-end healthcare is not available so affluent society travels for medical tourism. The key factors are lack of affordability, availability and accessibility,” he added.

“Though healthcare cost should be controlled in the UAE, medical tourism in UAE can’t be developed only on cost effectiveness,” he argues. “Perception of the destination, quality of services and added advantages can help in development of medical tourism.”

Hisham Farouk, International Practice Partner, Grant Thornton UAE, highlighted that Singapore, for example, has stated that it aims to attract one million medical tourists a year by 2012, and that the UAE also has the opportunity and means to become an important regional medical tourism destination.

“The further development of the medical tourism sector in the UAE, although dependent upon more competitive costs, can provide the country with significant direct and indirect benefits,” said Farouk.

“There is no question that the existing infrastructure in the UAE, and especially in clusters such as Dubai Healthcare City, is already well developed,” he said. “There is every reason to believe that the ongoing development of this potentially high-growth area will further enhance the reputation of the UAE as a centre of medical excellence and a leading destination for medical care.”

However, the DHCC is facing issues of its own. Affected by the global financial crunch, the prestigious Mayo Clinic recently shut down its out-patient heart clinic.

Timelines of other important projects such as the University Hospital which was due to be completed in 2011, are also being reviewed, said Dr Ayesha Abdulla, Senior Vice President of DHCC.

“We may not be able to compete on price with India, but we offer quality,” said Dr Ayesha, while speaking to Khaleej Times. The DHCC saw over 200,000 patients last year of which 10 per cent were from overseas.

Source: khaleejtimes.com

Thailand to Receive Maximum Medical Tourists in Asia

Posted on 30 January 2010 in Uncategorized by admin

Thailand represents Asia’s oldest player in the medical tourism sector. Medical tourism in Thailand has been consistently growing at rapid pace. Medical care on offer is high by regional standards and treatment is typically 60-70% cheaper than in Europe or the US. The treatment in Thailand is even cheaper than other Asian markets such as Singapore. According to our new research on the sector called “Asian Medical Tourism Analysis (2008-2012)”, the medical tourism market in Thailand is expected to grow at a CAGR of around 11% during 2010-2012.

Our research report is an outcome of extensive analysis of the medical tourism market in Thailand. We have identified that low cost factor along with the quality healthcare treatments have driven the growth of Thai medical tourism market. In this regard our report provides a through cost analysis of different treatments in Thailand by comparing them with other countries like India, Singapore and the US. Besides, we have also identified some other factors, which are essential for the growth of medical tourism market in different countries of Asia and have accumulated them all in our research study.

We have identified that medical tourism facilitators will play an important role in the development of new medical tourism markets in Asia. Thus, we have included a brief business profile of these facilitators. The report also enlists some major medical tourism facilitators in American and European countries, which can help our clients in getting business from these countries. Moreover, the report also discusses certain roadblocks that are restraining the growth of the medical tourism market in Asian countries.

“Asian Medical Tourism Analysis (2008-2012)” also provides valuable information on the key competitors in the market along with their business description and area of expertise. This will help clients in understanding the market in a better way, thereby providing them with an additional edge over other competitors in the market while devising their strategy.

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