Category Archives: Top Tips (all)

Medical Tourism Association®-Dubai Healthcare City Formalize Partnership to Foster Training, Quality Care, Patient Awareness

Agreement, reached at Arabian Travel Market in Dubai, will lead to certification, educational programs for medical tourism professionals in United Arab Emirates.

Palm Beach Gardens, FL :

The Medical Tourism Association® and Dubai Healthcare City (DHCC) have agreed to establish a joint Chapter Program in Dubai to raise awareness of the high level of health and wellness services available in the United Arab Emirates region.

The Memorandum of Understanding between the non-profit trade association headquartered in the United States and DHCC — home to two hospitals, more than 120 outpatient medical centers and diagnostic laboratories, and 4,000 licensed professionals in Dubai — was signed at Dubai Health Authority during the Arabian Travel Market, April 30, 2014, in Dubai.

“The challenge we embrace is underscored by Dubai’s robust population growth and vibrant economy, which will obviously warrant vigorous measures and investment in healthcare services, infrastructure and education,” said Renée-Marie Stephano, President of the Medical Tourism Association®. “We are excited about extending our resources to local, regional and international stakeholders and working together to strengthen existing initiatives, establish new opportunities and support and encourage training, improved care and leadership that markets Dubai as a leading medical tourism destination.”

The Medical Tourism Association® will work specifically with DHCC to provide strategic, operational and educational support to develop certificate and training programs for hospitals, patient specialists and medical tourism marketing professionals.

During the Arabian Travel Market, the Medical Tourism Association® conducted a day-long education and training program for physicians, hospital administrators, insurance executives, academic leaders, and health travel facilitators and investors leading toward Medical Tourism Professional Certification.

The four-day Arabian Travel Market attracted more than 2,700 medical tourism interests from 80 countries including a 31-member delegation from Taiwan of government officials, travel agents and health industry representatives.

Taiwan will showcase its healthcare system to multinational employers and insurance companies at World Medical Tourism Congress Taiwan 2014, June 26-27, 2014, at the Taipei International Convention Center. The Congress is sponsored by the Global Benefits Association in collaboration with the Medical Tourism Association® and Taiwan’s External Trade DevelopmentCouncil. For more information, go to http://www.wmtctaiwan.com

The Medical Tourism Association® is the first membership-based international nonprofit trade association for the medical tourism and healthcare industry made up of top international hospitals, healthcare providers, medical travel facilitators, insurance companies, and other affiliates committed to promoting the highest level of quality healthcare to patients in a global environment. www.MedicalTourismAssociation.com

source: http://www.pr.com / PR.com / Home> Press Release / Palm Beach Garden, FL / May 14th, 2014

Slovenia gets yet another ayurveda centre

In yet another boost to the increasing popularity of the Indian alternative medicinal system, the tiny Central European republic of Slovenia got its fourth ayurveda centre in the picturesque town of Bled.

The inaugural ceremony Tuesday included a Bhartnatyam recital by two Slovenian dancers who performed a Thillana, Pushpanjali and Ganesha Vandana in natural surroundings overlooking Lake Bled. The ceremony was attended by dignitaries of Slovenia, India’s Ambassador to Slovenia, Sarvajit Chakravarti, and a number of other international guests, according to an Indian embassy statement.

Following the recital, those attending the event were given a guided tour of the new ayurveda treatment facility.

Overlooking the beautiful Lake Bled that is surrounded by the snow-clad Alps, including Slovenia’s national peak Triglav, the ayurveda centre is a collaborative enterprise of Ayur Ashram of Dharwad in the south Indian state of Karnataka and the Kompas Hotel in Bled.

India’s Department of Ayurveda, Yoga and naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy (AYUSH) has provided information support to the centre.

Treatment will be provided under the supervision of Indian-origin Slovenian Vaidya Samo Safic Gupta, president of the ayurveda section of the Association of Integrative Medicine of Slovenia, which promotes the use of traditional medicine and alternative therapies.

Ayurveda and yoga are highly respected and widely popular in this Balkan nation of two million people. Slovenia already had three ayurveda centres staffed by qualified Indian ayurvedic practitioners and therapists at capital Ljubljana, Portoroz and Lasko.

The University of Primorska at Koper organised a World Congress of Ayurveda in 2009 and is now working on creating a chair of AYUSH with support from the Slovenian government and AYUSH in India.

Many Ayurvedic texts have been translated into Slovenian. Ayurvedic herbal products are quite easily available here.

The launch of an ayurveda centre in Bled, which annually hosts the Bled Strategic Forum and has initiated the Bled Film Festival, is expected to boost awareness of ayurveda and its efficacy more widely across the world, as the little town hosts dignitaries and travellers from over a hundred nations every year.

Indian dignitaries have frequently participated in the annual Bled Strategic Forum, a platform for high-level strategic dialogue among leaders from the private and public sectors on key issues facing Europe and the world in the 21st century.

Former Indian prime ministers Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi visited Bled several times.

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> News-IANS> Health-Medicine / by IANS / Ljubljana – May 07th, 2014

Visiting The United States For Medical Tourism Is Simple With DrforCash.com

DrforCash.com keeps patients from around the world up-to-date on location, pricing, and reputation of doctors as they look to take advantage of the exceptional medical services available in the United States.

Las Vegas :

Doctor For Cash, LLC, a bright young company aimed squarely at the American Medical Tourism industry, is happy to announce the launch of their new site: DrforCash.com.  A listing of doctors who operate on a cash basis, the site is an outstanding resource for those patients who are seeking just the right fit for their Medical Tourism needs.

With the changing economic realities worldwide, people are choosing to come to America more frequently in order to take advantage of the excellent standards of care at increasingly affordable prices. But such a decision is never taken lightly, and getting the right information into a prospective patient’s hands is precisely what DrforCash.com was created to do.

Offering those seeking a doctor excellent opportunities to review details about practices, as well as pricing on procedures, the site is a superb resource. Potential Medical Tourists are able to seek out the right kind of specialist in whatever location they prefer to visit. Be it a cardiologist in Los Angeles or a neurosurgeon in Atlanta, the site will help make all their options clear.

Plus, with the ability to read and leave reviews, prospective patients will find knowing what they’re getting into easier than ever, and they can rest assured that their experiences with a doctor will help others make informed decisions in the future.

Doctors looking to make contact with Medical Tourists are able to make clear, detailed updates to their profiles, thus making it even easier for these prospective new patients to get informed. This process is quick and easy, and can help make a new match a reality.

So no matter if someone is a Medical Tourist seeking a doctor, or a medical practitioner themselves, in search of new patients, DrforCash.com is a great resource for navigating this growing industry.

About DrforCash.com and Doctor For Cash, LLC.

The DrforCash.com website is operated by Las Vegas-based Doctor For Cash, LLC., a young, dynamic company with a vision. Doctor For Cash, LLC is focused on providing services to both medical practitioners looking for business and patients seeking the right care in their preferred area.

For further information regarding Doctor For Cash, LLC and the services offered at DrforCash.com, visit http://drforcash.com/ or email info@drforcash.com.

source: http://www.digitaljournal.com / Digital Journal / Home> Press Release / PR Newswire / Las Vegas – April 18th, 2014

India grants free visas to Maldivian medical tourists

INDIA is now offering Maldivian nationals free 90-day visas for medical tourism in a reversal of last year’s tightening of visa regulations for this segment.

Medical visa holders will no longer be required to report to the Foreign Regional Registration Office for visas with under 180 days’ validity.

Parvez Dewan, secretary at the Ministry of Tourism said: “It is a major visa liberalisation measure for Maldivian nationals. Only two other countries, Nepal and Bhutan, are provided free visas.

“We expect the move will benefit south Indian cities like Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai and Trivandrum the most, because of the robust medical facilities available there and because the region is known for Ayurveda (wellness treatments).”

Relations between the two countries soured after the Maldives prematurely terminated the contract with India’s GMR Group for the management of Ibrahim Nasir International Airport.

India retaliated by tightening visa restrictions on the Maldives’ medical tourists (TTG Asia e-Daily , January 09th, 2013 ).

Mohamed Nasser, Maldivian ambassador to India, remarked: “There are more than 20,000 Maldivians living in south India. Even last year, though we had visa issues, it didn’t deter Maldivians from travelling to India. However, with the help of this new visa regime, the number of Maldivians arriving in India will certainly increae as most of the Maldivians travelling to India are medical tourists.”

India registered 40,000 Maldivian arrivals in 2013.

source: http://www.ttgasia.com / TTG Asia / Home> Daily News Archives / by Rohit Kaul / New Delhi – February 05th, 2014

Schensul: ‘Wellness tourism’ is hot for 2014

I remember it was warm, desert warm. Warm outside. Warm inside. I remember hands, warm and gentle and sure. I remember reassurance and safety, acceptance and encouragement. I remember locks unlocking and light coming in.

Leaving Mii amo, a little spa nestled in the red rocks outside Sedona, Ariz., was like leaving the womb. A rebirth. And today, whenever I think I may be hitting bottom, when I think my soul has been squashed as flat as a run-over cartoon character, I think about Mii amo. I think I can go there and be resuscitated. And then some.

When I visited Mii amo, about a decade ago, most people would have consider it a kind of out there, woo-woo place — crystals, meditation labyrinths, chakras, ancient Ayurveda oils. Today, though, it’s not so strange. Today, a lot of travelers are off to Mii amo’s of their own. A vacation where they can revive, regroup and be healthy.

In our first installment on the subject of health and the modern traveler (Dec. 15, northjersey.com/travel), we focused on the many ways travel can make us sick. Today, we focus on the flip side: Travel that makes us well.

It’s been officially dubbed “wellness tourism,” and it’s one of the fastest-growing trends in travel these days. One of the factors fueling its popularity is, in fact, a reaction to all the unhealthy aspects of mainstream travel these days, from the hassles of airports to the high-season crowds to the rudeness and over scheduling and worry and exertion.

Not to mention the basic concept of vacations, which, for many, is to go a little excessive: overeating, drinking, partying all night, etc. All of which leaves a lot of people reporting back with the familiar: “need a vacation from my vacation” coda.

At the same time, more of us are making lifestyle changes and living healthier. Failing medical systems, the rising cost of health care, the stress of modern multitasking lives, have led people to take on more responsibility for maintaining their own health.

And of course the population is aging.

Add to this the greater awareness of, well, awareness — mindfulness, meditation and other once-woo-woo ways — and wellness tourism was a niche market just waiting to be noticed.

In 2013 SRI International, a nonprofit independent research and innovation center, did the first-ever study to quantify the wellness tourism market, and the numbers it came up with were attention-getters. Wellness tourism represents 14 percent of total global tourism revenue of $3.2 trillion. The market has been growing more than 9 percent annually — twice the rate of global tourism, overall — and that’s expected to continue the next five years.

The study included two types of wellness travelers: those whose primary purpose was to focus on their health — say, at a destination spa or a yoga retreat or a weight-loss boot camp — and secondary, those who engaged in some form of wellness activity or took advantage of healthier options while on vacation — anything from taking exercise classes on a cruise to dining at vegetarian restaurants or booking an allergy-free room at a hotel.

Wellness tourism includes aspects of all areas of travel, from resorts with exercise programs to active adventure trips, a day at hot springs or hotels that offer healthy-lifestyle dining or snack options.

Spas account for about 41 percent of all wellness-travel activities, according to the SRI study. The awareness — of wellness — heck, the proliferation of the word itself — has led to changes all across the travel industry. Wellness is the new “green.” It’s au courant, and it sells.

Consider:

* Travel agents are getting crash courses in wellness travel. Very few know the ins and outs and what’s available. Some agents who have long been interested in the field quickly established themselves as specialists: Well Traveled Co., for instance, opened just last year. Others, like Wellbeing Travel (wellbeingtravel.com), not only arrange trips but hire out as consultants. SpaFinder, the veteran of the pack, with 20 years under its very cinched belt, has recently added a tagline to its name: it’s now SpaFinder Wellness 365, reflecting the company’s broader bailiwick. In its list of travel trends earlier this year, Wellness Tourism Worldwide, a consulting team involved in education, promotion and branding wellness travel — and itself an outgrowth of this growing area of the tourism biz — predicted wellness agents would be one of the hot trends of the year,

* Hotels — at least some — are adding healthy components to their programs, from exercise classes to restaurant upgrades. But a few are investing big-time. The MGM Grand in Las Vegas refurbished 42 of its 5,000 rooms last year into so-called Stay Well accommodations, with features including “wake-up light therapy;” vitamin C-infused shower water, high-tech air purification and water filtration systems; and a photo-catalytic coating on bathroom surfaces, which breaks down bacteria. The rooms were in such demand that the hotel has added another 130.

InterContinental Hotels Group has gone even further, introducing an entirely new hotel brand that targets the wellness market. The EVEN Hotels will have elaborate gyms; all-natural amenities; in-room yoga balls and mats; and a selection of fresh-squeezed juices at its quick-service counters.

Joining the world of specialized hotel groups is the new Healing Hotels of the World, a collection of some 90 hotels worldwide.

* Cruising, once the playground for overindulgence, has fattened up its healthier offerings. Norwegian Cruise Line has partnered with New York’s revolutionary, high-energy indoor cycling studio, Flywheel Sports, to open studios on its newest ships. Its new Norwegian Getaway, which launches next month, will offer not only a state-of-the-art fitness center and large spa area, but a thermal suite and a cutting-edge therapeutic room.

On Uniworld cruises, all guests staying in suites receive a free in-suite spa service, along with personal training lessons and yoga throughout their cruise. And on Paul Gauguin Cruises in the South Pacific, a specially designed retractable watersports platform gives guests access to sea level, where they can hop aboard a windsurfer or paddleboard, launch a kayak, or learn how to scuba dive.

* Airports, ground zero for traveler freak-outs, seem to be slowly shaping up. San Francisco was the first to open a yoga studio in its newly remodeled Terminal 2; Dallas/Fort Worth, Burlington, Vt., and Chicago O’Hare have followed suit. Chicago also has two spas in the same terminal, and outside the yoga room, an urban garden growing vegetables that supply many of the restaurants inside the airport. DFW actually has a whole wellness campaign; in 2012 it opened its LiveWell Walking Path inside Terminal D; its “Eat Healthy at DFW” marketing campaign soon followed.

* OK, this isn’t widespread, but at least one airline, Qatar Airways, is going out of its way to become healthy. Working with Deepak Chopra, Qatar in 2009 created “Fly Healthy, Fly Fit,” a four-page guide of travel tips for the long-haul flier, with information on massage, seated yoga and meditation.

* Wellness poobahs are the newest tourism-related staff additions. Las Vegas, it turns out, is one of the biggest wellness destinations in the world, with 45 spas within four square miles — only appropriate, then, that since 2012, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority has had a medical and wellness tourism manager on staff.

The Benjamin hotel in Manhattan has a “sleep concierge,” and a staff that will give you a go-to-sleep call to get you to unplug.

* There are now Digital Detox vacation packages to pry your fingers from technology. Via Yoga, which leads yoga retreats in Central America, gives a discount to travelers who agree to give up their iPhones during their stay.

So you see, a lot has been going on the wellness tourism front.

What else is the future for the stressed and decrepit-feeling?

An expanding niche

Spafinder Wellness 365 released its 11th annual trends report of the top 10 spa and wellness trends last month. Fueling all those trends, according to SpaFinder, is “mindfulness” — attentiveness to the present moment. This new awareness, a sort of be here now for the new millennium, has been popularized by everyone from the Dalai Lama to Steve Jobs, and Susie Ellis, president of SpaFinder, says it is one of the biggest movements the wellness industry has ever seen. Here are SpaFinder’s predictions, including examples – some offered by spafinder, some our own finds.

HEALTHY HOTELS 2.0: It’s not just about adding something healthy for marketing purposes anymore. More hotels are going all in for health and well-being this year.

Example: Trump Hotels and TRYP by Wyndham are among the chains that have added in-room workout equipment, provide workout clothes, offer jogging routes and, in the case of Trump, even provide an iPod with music for your run or workout. Omni Hotels now has Get Fit Kits and Get Fit Rooms at some locations.

WIRED WELLNESS: While our addiction to technology is often part of the problem when it comes to stress and unhealthy lifestyles, technology also has its wellness applications – literally. Spas, hotels and destinations will take advantage of wellness apps, as well as customizable content, to create healthy experiences for their guests.

Example: The Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills is about to begin what it calls “the world’s first digital, customized in-room fitness program,” created by celebrity trainer Rick Hagaman. Guests fill out a short survey, and Hagaman will provide virtual personal training through his workout videos. Guests can work out in the privacy of their rooms, playing the videos on their own devices or on the iPads that are standard issue in all Four Seasons LA rooms. The simple workouts require no special equipment other than items like elastic bands and workout mats, which are provided in the Fitness Kits supplied to all guests).

HOT SPRINGS HEAT UP: Natural “healing waters” are nothing new, but they’re being given a new look, literally and figuratively. Traditional thermal baths like those found in Europe are being upgraded and new developments are creating wellness opportunities in more exotic locations. Because hot springs exist in virtually every country, governments and as well as private developers are funding hundreds of new projects in scenic settings around the world.

Example: Royal Teton Ranch Hot Springs, near Yellowstone National Park, will feature a luxury RV resort, restaurant and cabins around an assortment of pools featuring geothermal water. China’s Mission Hills Resort, in the volcanic region of exotic Hainan Island, boasts the biggest spa in the world, with 168 thermal pools.

SUSPENDING GRAVITY: Zero gravity, floating, whatever the label the sensation is the same – disconnecting from what keeps us pinned down to the earth. Spas and gyms are investing in flotation tanks, chambers and float pools. The newest additions to fitness classes are aerial and antigravity exercise classes and yoga workouts, using suspension rigs and antigravity treadmills.

Example: The new Amangiri’s Aman Spa in Utah has a vast flotation chamber built into a canyon cave, the water is packed with Dead Sea salts, and color therapy adds yet another dimension to the wellness experience.

FEROCIOUS FITNESS: High-intensity interval training with shorter time frames for exertion have become popular. Grueling boot camps and survival courses are in vogue thanks to reality TV.

Example: Gwinganna Lifestyle Retreat in Australia has added high-intensity training via boxing.

‘NATURAL’ BEAUTY MEETS SOCIAL MEDIA: Forget the makeup sessions and salon blow-outs. Today, when Instagram and other social media require us to post our photos anytime, anywhere, we need to look good 24/7, no preparation needed. The key is the natural look, which comes with a healthy lifestyle and the help of non-invasive and non-chemical treatments.

Example: Check out Bastien Gonzalez’s Pedi:Mani:Cure studios in places like France, Singapore, Turkey and India. These upscale treatments are as much about reflexology and revitalization as they are about beauty.

AROMATHERAPY: SCENT WITH INTENT: Spas are moving away from the basic use of generic aromatherapy oils in treatments and tapping into the specific healing uses of different plants and minerals. They are working with botanists to develop extensive lines of oils and changing their approach to aromatherapy and scent therapies to provide more specific and effective treatments, depending on the spagoer. Look for customized scents, with input from the guest.

Example: Spa Matilda at Hotel Matilda in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, involves guests in the selection of ingredients for their aromatherapy treatments with the spa’s apothecary concierge.

WELLNESS RETREATS RISE … URBANIZE: After many years of recession, when spas maintained the status quo, several high-end destination spas are expanding and establishing new facilities. A distinct sub-trend is the urban-close wellness retreat. Destination spas will locate close enough to big cities to be accessible to more wellness-seekers – especially in the Northeast.

Example: The highly regarded destination spa Miraval, long an institution in Tucson, will unveil its first new property in 2015 with Miraval at Natirar, in Somerset County. Set on a 500- acre estate, it will feature a vast spa, wellness pavilion and yoga center, along with the Ninety Acres Culinary Center, that marries a culinary school to a celebrated farm-to-table restaurant.

DEATH AND SPAS: THRIVING DURING LIFE’S TRANSITIONS: Spas, long a source of psychological as well as physical comfort in times of stress, are seeing the stresses that come with an aging population. Today they are helping clients tackle the changes and challenges that come with growing older and dying.

Example: The Connecticut Spa at Norwich Inn has partnered with The ECHO Cancer Foundation to create a “fragile client” treatment menu that includes wellness massage therapy, a relaxation facial, and a hydrating body antidote.

TOP 10 SURPRISING SPA AND WELLNESS DESTINATIONS: Spagoers are looking for new destinations and indigenous experiences. At the same time, many small, remote and exotic locations are perfect for quiet and inspiring nature retreats. Many of the emerging wellness destinations have histories marked by political unrest and war; governments are investing in new developments that can bring in dollars and provide a makeover for their country’s image.

The 10: Bhutan, Colombia, Croatia, Ghana, Lithuania, Morocco, Nicaragua, Portugal, Saudi Arabia and Vietnam.

It’s obvious the possibilities are vast, and the wellness traveler — who spends three times that of the average traveler — is worth wooing. So here’s my addition to the list of trends: Look for the word “wellness” to be used to the point of uselessness. While most of those in the business certainly have the best of intentions, brace yourself for those deceptive cases of well-washing. You know, like green-washing, but having to do with your health, not the planet’s.

Email: schensul@northjersey.com Blog: northjersey.com/openroad

source: http://www.northjersey.com / NorthJersey.com / Home> Travel / by Jill Schensul, Travel Columnist / Sunday – February 02nd, 2014