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BRITISH
NHS PATIENTS FAVOUR INDIA FOR TREATMENT
By Prasun Sonwalkar, London, October 28, 2007 (IANS)
India
has emerged the most popular destination for British patients wanting
to undergo surgery for ailments that would otherwise take months
to treat in the National Health Service (NHS). The first major survey
of medical tourism shows this year over 70,000 British citizens
will travel abroad for medical treatment. The figure is expected
to rise to 200,000 by the end of the decade. NHS hospitals in Britain
face long waiting lists and hygiene challenged by superbugs.
The,
figures show that British citizens have travelled to 112 hospitals
in 48 countries for safe, quick and affordable treatment. Several
websites based in India and Britain act as a single-window facility
to arrange treatment for British nationals. Many of them return
home, singing praises to the quality of treatment and post-operative
care they received in India.
Almost
all of those who had received treatment abroad said they would do
the same again, with patients pointing out that some hospitals in
India had screening policies for the superbug MRSA that have yet
to be introduced in this country.
The
survey, conducted by the Treatment Abroad website and reported in
'The Sunday Telegraph', revealed that besides India, other popular
destinations are Malaysia, South Africa, Hungary, Turkey, Poland
and Spain. India's popularity is due to the fact that flights, hotels
and a heart bypass operation there cost less than half the price
charged by British private hospitals.
Andrew
Lansley, the shadow health secretary, said the figures were a "terrible
indictment" of government policies that were undermining the
efforts of the NHS staff to provide quality services. He said: "Healthcare
is an area where Britain could be a world beater because we have
some of the best research and best clinicians. If people don't trust
the health service, then that is a terrible indictment of this government,
which has turned the NHS into a nationalised bureaucracy, instead
of something able to focus on what patients want."
Katherine
Murphy of the Patients' Association said that the health tourism
figures reflected shrinking public faith in the government's handling
of the NHS. She said: "The confidence that the public has in
NHS hospitals has been shattered by the growth of hospital infections
and this government's failure to make a real commitment to tackling
it.
"People
are simply frightened of going to NHS hospitals, so I am not surprised
the numbers going abroad are increasing so rapidly. My fear is that
most people can't afford to have private treatment - whether in
this country or abroad."
The
British Medical Association advised people to be careful when considering
treatment abroad, highlighting the dangers of flying soon after
surgery, which can cause complications. A BMA spokesman said: "Travelling
can place a great deal of stress on the body. Patients travelling
abroad for surgery should consider their fitness to fly and get
an understanding of an appropriate convalescence period before attempting
to return home."
A Department
of Health official said the number of patients seeking treatment
abroad was a tiny fraction of the 13 million treated on the NHS
each year, and that waiting times had fallen. Most people who had
hospital care did not contract infections, the official added.
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