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Published 3 December 2008, doi:10.1136/bmj.a2829
Cite this as: BMJ 2008;337:a2829
Tessa Richards, assistant editor, BMJ
trichards@bmj.com
So far health tourism is a small market, but it is set to stimulate welcome competition
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Its midwinter, and you are contemplating non-essential surgery. Might you be tempted to travel to sunnier climes for it? Singapore Medicine no doubt hopes so, and if you read the information package this private hospital group puts out you will note suggestions for spare time. Think "relaxing in tropical tranquillity." But it denies it is in the business of "sprinkling health care on vacations." Its aim is to become Asias leading healthcare destination.
It is not alone in this ambition. Over the past decade equally impressive new hospitals have opened in India, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines and also in South America and the Middle East. Not everyone has welcomed them. Some argue that they lure medical staff away from the public sector and cater only to a privileged elite.
Last month the Health Alliance for Democracy in the Philippines protested against its governments "continued investment in tourism," asserting that
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