High
medical skill & investment in latest technology to spur medical tourism in
India:Dr Prathap Reddy
India’s high medical
skills together with hospitals investing in advanced technology would enable
generation of Rs.12.40 lakh ($20,000) per patient as against Rs.1.24 lakh ($
2,000 per person) from general tourism, said Dr Prathap Reddy, founder and chairman,
Apollo Hospitals Group.
Asking the central and
state governments to promote tourism, Dr Reddy feels there should be equal
support for medical tourism going by the scope for Indian healthcare specialists
to prove their mettle.
India’s skill sets are
second to none in the world and this along with investments in the latest
technology both diagnostic and surgical by its healthcare providers could see
the country garner the much required revenues to boost growth in healthcare.
Currently, out of the 8 million annual inflow of international tourists into
India, 2 million are for medical tourism. We are witnessing a 30 per cent
uptick in annual medical tourists which indicates the positive image of Indian
healthcare. Patients from Africa, Middle East and Asian regions access Indian
hospitals for cardiac interventions, joint transplant, dental care, among
others. We do expect an increase in patients from the US and UK where
governments are under pressure to control healthcare costs, said Dr Reddy, who
was here in Bengaluru in connection with the 1,000th joint replacement at the
Apollo Hospital, Jayanagar centre, Bengaluru.
The advent of 4G mobile
phone services would now be a paradigm shift in the healthcare industry and
this would also further give fillip to medical tourism.
In order to garner a
substantial share of the medical tourism revenues, Apollo Group has slated an
investment of Rs.150 crore to open a 200-bed facility at Malleswaram in
Bengaluru, its third super speciality centre in Karnataka. The Greenfield
hospital will be commissioned in April 2015 and will have a 50-bed critical
care capacity with an e-ICU for monitoring critical care patients remotely.
Over 100 senior consultants will provide round the clock care.
“Karnataka has been on the
top of the medical tourism map and Apollo's two existing facilities in
Bengaluru have seen 150 international patients access care. The installations
of oncology diagnostics and treatment, besides latest surgical innovations in
cardiology and orthopaedics have brought international patients to India. This
third facility in Bengaluru equipped with complete range of diagnostics and
advanced operation theatres to perform complex interventions will also work to
treat foreign patients who look to India for high quality care from its
qualified medical teams,” said Dr Reddy.
According to the KPMG-CII
report, India’s medical tourism market is estimated to touch $3.9 billion in
2014 as against 85 million in 2012. The segment generated a compounded annual
growth rate of 27 per cent over the last three years.
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