news about medical tourism and patients travelling to foreign countries for medical treatment

Medical Tourism

news about medical tourism and patients travelling to foreign countries for medical treatment

Monday, February 26, 2007

Bumrungrad - AIRPORT HEALTH TOURISM !


Bumrungrad International Hospital last week opened a new airport service centre at Suvarnabhumi, while Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital is scheduled to open the first medical centre to be run by a private hospital at the airport next week.
Centrally located in section C of the arrival hall and next to the Tourism Authority of Thailand counter at the new Bangkok Airport, the Bumrungrad Airport Service Centre provides mainly information and ground support services for its inbound patients in a stylish, business-class lounge setting. The centre complements a long list of services the hospital currently offers international patients, which include on-site serviced apartments, visa extensions and interpreters.
Bumrungrad is one of a handful of local hospitals that rely heavily on patients from abroad. It treated an estimated 450,000 foreign patients in 2006, a rise from 400,000 a year earlier. If domestic patients are included, the hospital treated more than one million patients in 2006.
Medical tourism has been a boon to Thailand in recent years, attracting high-value tourists who tend to stay longer and spend more than the average leisure tourist.
Meanwhile, Samitivej Srinakarin Hospital is set to open its clinic on the third floor of the passenger terminal complex. It will mainly provide primary medical treatment, not only to foreign tourists but also staff of Airports of Thailand, and people working in and around the airport.
An ambulance service was also on 24-hour standby to transport critical patients from Suvarnabhumi to the hospital. Samitivej Srinakarin is part of the Bangkok Dusit Medical Services group.

Laser for Varicose Veins - ? - !


Laser Cures Varicose Veins Laser therapy zaps unsightly and painful varicose veins by attacking the most common cause of the disease ? a weakening of the great saphenous vein in the legs. But a new study suggests the therapy also helps to restore function in other, smaller vessels, thought to cause about 20 percent of varicose veins. Lasers are proving their worth in treating these often hard-to-reach veins, concludes the study, just presented at the Society of Interventional Radiology?s annual meeting in New Orleans. ?Millions of patients who were misdiagnosed in the past and not well treated can now benefit from laser therapy,? said study author Dr Robert Min, who pioneered and patented the use of laser therapy in the great saphenous vein. ?We found the treatment to be equally safe as it has been for the great saphenous vein and at least as good or better,? he said. The study assessed the use of endovenous laser ablation, or laser therapy within the vein, in 204 limbs of 192 patients treated over a 56-month period. According to the researchers, nearly all (96 percent) of the veins treated remained closed two years after laser therapy. In addition, patients reported no incidents of skin burns, nerve damage or other heat-related complications. ?Previously we didn?t think these smaller veins could be treated with laser therapy because of concerns it would cause burns or injury,? said Dr Rodney Raabe, an interventional radiologist at the Inland Vascular Institute in Spokane, Washington. ?Min has found that we can successfully treat veins we previously thought we could not.? In the study, ultrasound was used to accurately pinpoint faulty non-great saphenous veins. Subjects were given a local anaesthetic and then a small nick was made in the skin. Using a thin catheter and the guidance of ultrasound imaging, doctors threaded a thin laser fibre within the faulty vein and sealed it with laser energy. Making the procedure more safe In the past, doctors have been wary of treating these smaller veins because they often exist in close proximity to nerves and arteries. ?There was concern that the laser would be too powerful,? Raabe said. But the study showed that the use of a local anaesthetic unexpectedly helped to make the procedure more safe. ?The anaesthetic not only takes away pain, it also surrounds the target vein with fluid,? said Min, an interventional radiologist at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York City. ?The fluid acts as a barrier to protect any non-target structures.? Patients in the study did experience bruising, he said. Doctors have traditionally used surgery to remove the veins, but recurrence rates are more than 25 percent. In contrast, laser therapy has a recurrence rate of less than five percent. Source: laserhairremoval.kwikfire.com
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