Category Archives: Health /Medical Treatment For Overseas Treatment

Medical tourism, more elderly flyers among reasons for airport medical crises

Not that the heart gives a choice, but had it been considerate enough to do so, the safest place to have a cardiac arrest, outside of a hospital, would surely be the Mumbai airport.

(Photo Courtesy: Getty Images)

(Photo Courtesy: Getty Images)

Not that the heart gives a choice, but had it been considerate enough to do so, the safest place to have a cardiac arrest, outside of a hospital, would surely be the Mumbai airport.

The domestic and the integrated terminal 2 have a total of 106 automatic electronic defibrillators (AED) installed in well-marked locations for quick access in areas such as the terminal halls, departure gates, baggage retrieval sections, passenger coaches, interterminal coaches and even the toilets and elevators. It’s the largest number of AEDs installed at any airport in India. And the defibrillators are used more often than one would think.

Last year, the Mumbai airport medical team handled an average of 45 cases a day, with a majority being heart attacks and cardiac arrests.

Between 2010 and March 2016, over 200 million passengers passed through the Mumbai airport. In these five years, it handled more than 85,000 medical cases.

Despite the Delhi airport handling a larger passenger traffic, Mumbai faces the largest number of medical emergencies. There are a number of reasons for the high number of medical cases reported here, says an airport official. For one, it is a popular entry point for medical tourists. Then again, Mumbai has the Tata Memorial hospital, which attracts cancer patients from across the country . And lastly , the steady rise in the number of senior citizens who board international flights, especially the 15-16-hour ultra-long haul, non-stop flights from Mumbai to Newark.

“Out of 85,000 cases handled in the past 5 years, 1,814 were serious medical cases, largely cardiovascular emergencies, where patients were shifted to hospital by the airport team,” said a Mumbai International Airport Pvt Ltd (MIAL) official.

That’s where the defibrillator programme comes in. It follows the international gold standard, the “3-minute drop to shock” rule. That is, within 180 seconds of a passenger dropping or collapsing following a heart attack or cardiac arrest, he/she should start receiving the defibrillation shock. “The large number of AEDs ensures that at any point during a passenger’s journey through the airport, a defibrillator can be retrieved and used in less than 3 minutes,” said a senior doctor with MIAL’s medical team.

Besides, given the location of Mumbai, there is the occasional detour by international aircraft overflying India in case of a medical emergency . A fortnight ago, an Emirates A380 flying from Dubai to Brisbane landed in Mumbai after a 73-year old Australian passenger suffered a cardiac arrest on board.

Apart from the serious cardiac emergencies, the other medical cases handled involve senior citizens who disembark from long-haul flights with symptoms of deep vein thrombosis that sets in if one sits for hours in cramped airline seats, people whose blood pressure shoots up, asthma attacks, cargo handlers who get injured, airline crew, staff who collapse from fatigue.

And then there are cases like children who run on to conveyor belts or elevators and get injured. Every once in a while comes an unusual case. Like last August, when a young Saudi transit passenger waiting to board a flight to Riyadh went into labour and delivered a boy in the airport’s washroom. That rare birth apart, mostly the serious medical emergencies at the airport are about fighting death.

source:  http://www.health.economictimes.indiatimes.com / ETHealthworld.com / Home> Industry / by Manju V. / TNN / June 02nd, 2016

After IT, Bengaluru emerging in Medical Tourism as well

Bengaluru:

Now, it’s turn for Bengaluru to make waves in medical tourism. The IT capital city of India is leading in attracting number of foreign patients.

A latest study reveals that 8,020 patients from different countries visited Bengaluru for medical treatment last year. Super specialty medical facilities for cancer, organ transplantation, cardiac care, nephrology, urology, neuro surgery, orthopedics at affordable cost in Bengaluru are major attraction for foreign patients.

The study was based on the statistics taken from records at hospitals located in and around Bengaluru. Manipal hospital recorded 49,000 patients during the past two years. Dr Manjunath at a hospital in Bengaluru, said: “Medical tourism in India is gaining momentum and now ranks at third position in the world. However, amenities at the hospitals and more facilities for foreign tourists need to be enhanced.”

Foreign patients from countries such as Iraq, Bangladesh, Yemen, Oman, Maldives, Mauritius, Tanzania, Kenya, Nigeria and Indonesia. Patients from several developing nations prefer Indian hospitals as world-class medical treatment at affordable cost is available. Indian doctors have expertise on par with doctors in US, Europe and Singapore. After Manipal Hospital, other hospitals such as Columbia Asia Hospital, Fortis Hospital are major ones in attracting foreign patients.

source: http://www.sakshipost.com / Sakshi Post / Home> Business / Friday – May 27th, 2016

Tijuana’s medical tourism gets a facelift enticing more Americans in for cheap luxury surgery

Shedding its American-teen Spring Break reputation, the famed low-cost medical treatment industry is classing up.
Developers intend to build a one-stop shop for visiting American patients

Developers intend to build a one-stop shop for visiting American patients

 It’s after dark on Avenida Revolucion, Tijuana’s main tourist drag, and beneath the garish neon of a late-night storefront, a mannequin in a skin-tight nurse’s outfit stands beckoning potential customers inside. Americans have been travelling to this border city for at least a century to sample its nocturnal charms. Hollywood stars mingled with mobsters here during the Prohibition era. Underage college kids came to drink themselves silly on Spring Break, before they were scared away by the violence of the local drug cartels.

Avenida Revolucion runs directly into the red light district, where other vices await, but the mannequin in the medical get-up is here to flog something a little less seedy: cut-price Viagra. There’s at least one discount pharmacy per block, selling cheap, generic medications from sleeping pills to sex aids, with – and occasionally without – a prescription. Tijuana’s biggest draw for Americans, before even the night-life, is its low-cost medical treatment: dental care, cosmetic surgery, stem-cell transplants, hip replacements and more.

Now, the city’s thriving medical tourism industry is classing up. The developers of a cluster of luxury high-rises just across the border from California intend to build a one-stop shop for visiting American patients. The 26-storey New City Medical Plaza will house facilities for doctors from a broad range of disciplines, a 140-room hotel and a food court featuring Baja California cuisine from top local restaurants. Construction has already begun on the tower, which the developers hope to open by the end of 2018.

Even if President Trump succeeds in building his infamous border wall, the complex will be clearly visible from the US side. Inside one of New City’s existing luxury residential towers, there are marble floors, private security guards, a fake miniature waterfall and a private members club on the penthouse floor, with a clear view back over the border to Downtown San Diego. Sitting in the bar at sunset, Isaac Abadi, New City’s chief executive, said travelling south for treatment should be a no-brainer for Californians.

“Here, you’ll pay a dentist 40 or 50 bucks to treat a cavity that you’d pay 200 bucks for in the US,” he said. “It’s irresponsible going to the dentist in San Diego when you can drive down here in 15 minutes and get the job done for a quarter of the price. Some people are scared of coming to Tijuana. But with this view, you feel like you’re still in San Diego!”

Around 85 per cent of Tijuana’s medical tourists are from Southern California (GETTY)

Around 85 per cent of Tijuana’s medical tourists are from Southern California (GETTY)

Around a million Americans cross the border to Baja California every year for healthcare. Some lack suitable insurance coverage in the US, some have insurers who will cover their cut-rate treatment in Mexico, some are taking advantage of shorter waiting times for tests, some want to avoid the exorbitant cost of elective procedures such as plastic surgery or weight-loss. According to the medical tourism bible Patients Without Borders, US patients can expect to pay an average of between 40 and 65 per cent less for treatment than they would at home.

A so-called medical “fast-pass” programme allows US patients of registered Mexican doctors to pass through the San Ysidro border crossing in a special fast lane, avoiding the notoriously long queues. Around 85 per cent of Tijuana’s medical tourists are from Southern California, Ives Lelevier, Baja California’s undersecretary of tourism, recently told the Los Angeles Times, adding: “We believe that we can bring people from areas that are farther away, something that in the medium term can turn into a greater revenue generator for the state.”

Rafael Alcaraz, a bilingual psychologist who specialises in family, child and marriage therapy, and who treats clients from both sides of the border, said business is back on the rise after a decade of devastating narco violence. “Back in 2007 it was horrible,” he said.

“By six in the afternoon, nobody was on the streets, nobody was in the restaurants or cafes, and if you saw any traffic you’d get paranoid that you were being followed. There were always rumours that someone you knew had been kidnapped or killed. But about five years ago the violence all died down, the restaurants filled up again, and now there’s a huge boom in tourism, including medical tourism.”

Many of his patients, Dr Alcaraz said, plan their appointments to coincide with a weekend mini-break in Baja, or a trip to see the local football team the Xolos. “I have patients that come to me on a Friday afternoon, then they go to the football stadium, tail-gate, watch the game, sleep over and go down to Ensenada for the weekend.”

A medical “fast-pass” allows US patients of registered Mexican doctors to pass through the border (Rex Features)

A medical “fast-pass” allows US patients of registered Mexican doctors to pass through the border (Rex Features)

Dr Alcaraz’s office in Tijuana’s Zona Rio neighbourhood is upstairs from the plastic surgery clinic where his wife, Marie-Helene Chabrier, offers anti-ageing treatments such as Botox, fillers, chemical peels, hormone replacement and enzyme therapy. (Medicine is a family business: Dr Chabrier’s brother is a plastic surgeon, Dr Alcaraz’s father is a dentist.)

Some 90 per cent of Dr Chabrier’s patients are American, and she has regular clients from as far away as Las Vegas and New York. “The procedures can be a couple of hundred dollars cheaper than they are in the US,” she explained. “They mostly used to come for the price, but now they come for the quality of service.” Her clients even kept visiting during the bad years, she said. “Women would still come down from California for treatment during the violence, but only if it was urgent. ‘I’m hosting a party! I have to get my Botox!’”

source: http://www.independent.co.uk / Independent / Home> Lifestyle> Health & Families / by Tim Walker, Tijuana / Friday – April 15th, 2016

Dubai launches medical tourism portal

International medical tourists can now book their procedures online, along with a range of healthcare related services at a newly launched web portal.

International medical tourists travelling to Dubai can now book their procedures online at a new web portal. International medical tourists travelling to Dubai can now book their procedures online at a new web portal.

International medical tourists travelling to Dubai can now book their procedures online at a new web portal. International medical tourists travelling to Dubai can now book their procedures online at a new web portal.

Dubai Health Experience provides health, travel, hospitality and visa services online, and Dubai Health Authority (DHA) is aiming to attract more than 500,000 international medical tourists by 2020.

The portal enables people to log on to the website and book procedure packages – including wellness, cosmetic and dental services, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, physiotherapy and specialised medical tests – at any of the 26 private and public hospitals in Dubai,

Dubai Health Experience also allows guests to access numerous other incentives, such as discounted Emirates airfares and hotel stays.

DHA chairman of the board of directors and director-general Humaid Al Qutami said: “Dubai is at the pinnacle of safety, security, creativity and innovation and has over 200 nationalities living here. It has been a pioneer and leader in global development and by choosing to be a global hub of medical tourism it will redefine development on the map of this region.”

DHA head of medical tourism initiative Laila Al Marzouqi added: “In 26 hospitals of Dubai we witnessed a traffic of 638,000 medical tourists, of whom nearly 47,000 were international tourists. This high traffic was recorded at just the 26 private and public hospitals and we are not even talking about the medical tourism procedures conducted in over 1,000 clinics and ambulatory care centres in Dubai. Every year the number goes up by 12 to 15%.

“We are adhering to international best practices and do not think there would be any malpractice, but this provision has been provided for the peace of mind of the patient. If there is a complication, then the individual will be allowed to return to UAE free of charge and revision of the surgery will be carried out free of charge. This insurance valid for a month after the procedure will cover the complication at no extra cost to the patient.”

source: http://www.hoteliermiddleeast.com / HotelierMiddleEast.com / Home> Leisure / by David Thompson / April 11th, 2016

Health City Cayman Islands completes first complex cardiac procedure

The Health City Team from left: Dr. Chandy Abraham, Dr. Ravi Kishore, Dr. Binoy Chattuparambil, Dr. Dhruva Krishnan and Dr. Sumit Modi. Photo Health City Cayman Islands

The Health City Team from left: Dr. Chandy Abraham, Dr. Ravi Kishore, Dr. Binoy Chattuparambil, Dr. Dhruva Krishnan and Dr. Sumit Modi. Photo Health City Cayman Islands

Cayman Islands :

While St. Maarten has been talking about medical tourism for years, Health City Cayman islands has plowed ahead and recently completed the first ever Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation  (TAVI) undertaken in the English-speaking Caribbean.

The complex cardiac procedure was performed successfully last month on local Cayman Islands patient Dianna Merren by Health City’s Senior Cardiologist and Electrophysiologist Dr. Ravi Kishore and Senior Cardiac Surgeon Dr. Binoy Chattuparambil. The procedure was guided by proctor Dr. Stephen Brecker from St. George’s Hospital in London, and assisted by Senior Anesthesiologist Dr. Dhruva Krishnan.

According to Dr. Kishore, the event marked the cardiovascular department’s foray into structural heart disease intervention by implanting the aortic valve using transcatheter techniques.

“This is indeed a proud moment for Health City and the Cayman Islands, as successful completion of such a complex procedure speaks volumes about the capabilities of our doctors and what we have been able to achieve as a hospital in just under two years,” he noted.

TAVI is performed only on patients who are not well suited for open heart surgery .

Ms. Merren was regularly admitted to a hospital for heart failure due to a large obstruction of the valve connecting the major chamber of the heart – severe valvular aortic stenosis. Her complex condition and multiple medical complications precluded her from the usual procedure choice for this condition, surgical valve replacement , but made her an ideal candidate for TAVI.

“I have been very sick for a long time, so when the doctors at Health City offered me a safe solution I was very grateful,” said Merren. “Being the first patient for this procedure made me a little nervous, but the wonderful medical team put my fears to rest, providing me with all the information I needed to understand the procedure and the risks.”

The TAVI procedure is a minimally invasive surgery that replaces the valve without removing the old damaged valve. Unlike conventional open heart surgery, TAVI involves placement of the artificial valve through a six to seven millimeter hole in the upper thigh under general anesthesia.

Merren’s procedure took just under two hours, and the patient was discharged within a couple of days.

“I am so thankful to my family and friends who stood beside me in support, as well as the entire Health City team. The surgery has changed my life, and I am already feeling much stronger and healthier,” Merren stated.

“It’s a game changer,” Dr. Kishore said. “We have performed our first TAVI to relieve this 75-year-old woman from severe life-threatening problems caused by a diseased valve. The outcome is extremely promising.”

Dr. Kishore said reduced morbidity is the biggest advantage of the procedure. “The hole made for insertion of the valve is closed immediately after the procedure and the patient is mobilized in 12 to 24 hours of the procedure. This also reduces the risk of complications and infections, which in the case of Dianna Merren was a primary concern,” he said.

Patients who qualify for this procedure will now have the opportunity to select Health City Cayman Islands as their hospital of choice for the surgery at a significantly lower cost compared to facilities in the United States.

As the Joint Commission International-accredited Health City Cayman Islands is the first English-speaking country in the Caribbean to perform the TAVI, this provides breakthrough opportunities in the field of interventional cardiology in the Cayman Islands and the region.

Health City Cayman Islands, the vision of renowned heart surgeon and humanitarian Dr. Devi Shetty, is supported by two major healthcare organizations, Narayana Health and the U.S.-based Ascension, which is that nation’s largest faith-based and nonprofit health system, providing the highest quality care to all with special attention to those who are poor and vulnerable. Health City Cayman Islands provides compassionate, high-quality, affordable healthcare services in a world-class, comfortable, patient-centered environment. Offering healthcare to international, regional and local patients. Health City Cayman Islands delivers excellence in adult and pediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery, cardiac electrophysiology, medical oncology, orthopedics, sports medicine, pediatric endocrinology, gastrointestinal and bariatric surgery, neurosurgery, minimally invasive spine surgery and pulmonology services.

source: http://www.todaysxm.com / Today / Newspaper for Country St.Maarten / April 06th, 2016