Tag: tourism

  • Sher Bagh, Anantnag

    Sher Bagh, Anantnag

    [ad_1]

    Once upon a time, the garden was an address for peak summer bathing, swimming and prayers. Now, Sher Bagh is a place for a brief halt for patients visiting the women’s hospital, reports Aasiya Nazir

    Once the town’s coolest place for prayers, fresh air, and rest, Anantnag’s Sher Bagh is a sort of ruin now. Its glory is lost, and so is its quality of water and the freshwater fish ponds that would help kids pick up swimming and understand the aquatic life.

    It is a historic garden. Residents attribute it to the Mughal era insisting that the pleasure-seeking occupiers laid most of the gardens in Kashmir including the south. However, history lacks a clear idea to vindicate the claim.

    “Till 1951, the discharge from the Andar Nag spring had created a marsh on the spot,” M Salim Baig, the INTACH convenor in Jammu and Kashmir said. “One day when Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah visited the town, the residents talked about the marsh and he suggested it be converted into the garden for the locality and since then it is named Sher Bagh.”

    Baigh said he has checked with the historians and they have revealed that the residents went to neighbouring Mattan wherefrom they got fish and were introduced to the newly refurbished garden. Andar Bagh has a spring called Nagbal and the discharge made a small waterfall. Given the fact that there are a few references to the garden prior to 1947, there is a possibility that there might have been some kind of garden which was in duse and mismanaged and resulted in a marsh. “Mughals avoided laying gardens in the towns. All the Mughal gardens are far away from the population. They avoided laying a major garden in Srinagar.”

    The neighbouring Rani Bagh, part of which houses an educational institution, is attributed to the Dogra period.

    Sher Bagh is located on the foot of a hill that is home to a Sulphur spring, the Andar Nag. In fact, the discharge from this spring lands in Sher Bagh and moves through the neighbouring localities and eventually gets into the Jhelum. The water channel, however, is in ruins as the discharge has gone down.

    Even though the water discharge has gone down, fish are hardly seen in the ponds, the garden still holds its majestic looks. It has enormous Chinars and during summers it is lush green.

    SherBagh Anantnag
    A view of Sher Bagh in Anantnag garden in February 2023. KL Image: Shah Hilal

    What makes the Andar Nag and Sher Bagh premises interesting is that it has the stakeholding of all the faiths. The Nag premises have a temple and a Gurudwara. The Sher Bagh has an open mosque, where, till recently prayers were offered five times a day. It is an impressive platform that has a freshwater pond and various water channels surrounding it. The main pond has been a public swimming pool for generations. However, it was never called a mosque and was always referred to as Nimazgah.

    “We used to swim in smaller channels and once we would get trained, we will finally swim in the main pond,” Abdul Rashid, a resident, now a doctor said. Originating from the sulphur spring, the water would normally be cold in spring and slightly warmer in winter. “It was a place for recreation and picking the real-life skill, the swimming and in between, there would be prayers.”

    = Now, the garden is the casualty of the times. Officially it is managed by the fisheries department but there is no any fish in the ponds and the channels. The space that would be crowded by the residents during afternoons till late in the evening is now the resting place for the attendants of women admitted to the Maternity and Child Care Hospital.

    The park space has been relocated. Realigned, it is craving for upkeep and proper maintenance.

    Residents allege that the park has received little to no attention in the last many years. They claimed that visitors have ceased to get in. The fish have disappeared. They attribute it to the pollution over the hill.

    “When I was a kid the number of fishes in the ponds was such that the surface was never visible,” resident, Mohammad Yousuf, said. “The water was so clean that we used to drink it. Now the water is polluted.”

    Even though it lost its beauty, the garden retains its utility. Located near one of the busiest markets in the town, people still get in, take a rest and leave.

    Society has equally contributed to the unmaking of this space. Though enough and adequate parking space is available near Rani Park, most of the people park their vehicles outside Sher Bagh, polluting its atmosphere. The parking at the main gate of the Bagh is impacting business and sometimes hinders the emergency cases in the hospital in their movement.

    Another telling mess of the park is that the people who have lunch in the park, throw away a lot of waste. The park managers have failed to offer any kind of system that will enable the space to stay clean. Dustbins are there but nobody uses them.

    Those visiting the park have their own issues. Zaina Begum is a frequent visitor. “The single biggest issue that the people face is the closure of the washrooms,” Begum said. “The public toilets were so dirty that they were locked, once and for all.”

    Residents said the park is facing a crisis because there is multiple stakeholdings. While the property belongs to the Waqf Board, fish are supposed to be the Fisheries Department’s responsibility and the park is to be maintained by the Floriculture department. Residents said it would be ideal if the Bagh is given to a private party that will maintain it and manage it at a cost. “There is no harm in people paying some coins for spending a few hours in the park,” one resident suggested.

    [ad_2]
    #Sher #Bagh #Anantnag

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Tourism Department Registers 251 Complaints Of Cheating, Other TT Act Violations During 2022

    Tourism Department Registers 251 Complaints Of Cheating, Other TT Act Violations During 2022

    [ad_1]

    SRINAGAR: The Department of Tourism has registered 251 complaints of various nature from tourists and visitors in respect of violations of J&K Tourist Trade Act-1978/2012 by respective service providers even as 247 of these were settled and fine to the tune of Rs. 21.95 lakh was recovered from the erring service providers.

    The Department, during this one year, also ensured refund of Rs. 11.82 lakh from respective service providers in favour of prospective tourists for having charged them arbitrarily or not providing them the services for which they were charged.

    The Department has taken a series of recent initiatives to bring transparency and promptness in addressing any complaints from the tourists. Separate monitoring teams have already been set up at all destinations comprising respective Resort Officers, representatives from Development Authorities and Tourist Police.

    This is in addition to a central monitoring team comprising senior officers to check the compliance of J&K Tourist Trade Act and ensure that tourists are treated in a manner befitting to the hospitality traditions of the place, they feel safe and in no way have any complaints of cheating, touting, overcharging.

    The Department of Tourism has advised all tourism service providers to desist from any sort of cheating or overcharging from the tourists. The Department has made it amply clear that relevant provisions of J&K Registration of Tourist Trade Act-1978/2012 and other penal laws would be invoked in case of deviant stakeholders.

    Secretary Tourism, Sarmad Hafeez along with Director, Tourism Kashmir, Fazlul Haseeb during a recent review meeting of the Department had given clear instructions for close monitoring by Resort Officers in this regard and not to allow any single service provider to damage the reputation of the whole tourism sector or genuine service providers.

    A spokesman of the Department said though it was good that we are witnessing a bumper season of tourist arrivals, it was incumbent upon the stakeholders and the Department to ensure that tourists are attended decently, properly and charged fairly for the services they utilize so that they return back with memories as beautiful as Kashmir is known for.

    [ad_2]
    #Tourism #Department #Registers #Complaints #Cheating #Act #Violations

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Backward classes given high priority in MLC election: AP Tourism Min

    Backward classes given high priority in MLC election: AP Tourism Min

    [ad_1]

    Chittoor: Andhra Pradesh Tourism Minister Roja on Wednesday alleged that Telugu Desam Party (TDP) Chief N Chandrababu Naidu and other TDP leaders were misusing the police.

    She also claimed that her party honoured 14 backward castes by giving them MLC tickets.
    Chandrababu is the only person who knows how to use the police system, she alleged.

    “People are not in a position to trust Chandrababu and Telugu Desam Party. TDP will not get even a single seat in the next elections.

    TDP leaders are making provocative comments in Gannavaram. After the 2024 elections, Chandrababu will be kicked out of Hyderabad,” she said.

    She also said that although TDP leaders are cursing the CM . CM Jagan Mohan Reddy is always working for the welfare of the people.

    “If TDP workers raise their mouths, we will answer them with our hands. The state stands first in ease of doing, GSTP,” she concluded.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #classes #high #priority #MLC #election #Tourism #Min

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Saudi: AlUla launches entertainment, tourism licenses portal

    Saudi: AlUla launches entertainment, tourism licenses portal

    [ad_1]

    Riyadh: The Saudi Arabia’s Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU) on Sunday, announced the launch of the tourism and entertainment licensing and permit portal, local media reported.

    This came in order to facilitate the provision of services in the AlUla, develop the governorate’s operations and automate procedures.

    After Cabinet approval, RCU can issue licenses for travel and tourism agencies, accommodation, tours and facilities management.

    The RCU thanked the government for its support to display the culture, art and history of the nation in line with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030.

    The RCU affirms its commitment to the highest standards of excellence and international best practices.

    It has called on everyone to visit the e-services portal to submit requests for tourism and entertainment permits.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News



    [ad_2]
    #Saudi #AlUla #launches #entertainment #tourism #licenses #portal

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Progressing J&K: J&K Tourism industry booming; record 1.88 Cr tourist footfall witnessed in 2022

    [ad_1]

    Religious Tourist circuits being established across J&K to promote Pilgrimage tourism

    Srinagar, Feb 14 (GNS): For the first time in history of Jammu and Kashmir, record 1.88 Crore tourists visited UT in the year 2022 to enjoy the beauty of various famed tourist spots.

    The enhanced tourist arrivals in the Union Territory has generated greatest employment in various regions, highlighting its overall development through a constructive approach, transformative initiatives and inevitable reforms to empower J&K for its people, culture and society.

    The Government of India is also making a significant thrust to ensure better infrastructural facilities for the region’s people and entice visitors. This has resulted in a fortuitous surge in tourist activities with better law and order, promising security system, and maintenance of peace in addition to infrastructural and connectivity improvements.

    J&K administration is also focused on exploring the full potential of pilgrimage tourism by developing various religious tourist circuits across the union territory. Keeping in view the increasing number of devotees coming to visit Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine, facilities and infrastructure is being strengthened.

    As per the official data, the construction work of Mantalai Wellness Center has been completed at a cost of Rs. 80 crore and the design of Katra Multi Modal Station has been finalized. Similarly, twork on Tawi Riverfront is going on in full swing besides Mansar and Surinsar have made their presence on the tourism map of the country. The Government is working tirelessly to open Sanasar Tulip Garden for local people and tourists this year.

     Similarly, the work on conservation and renovation of 18 historical-cultural heritage sites in Jammu, Kathua, Ramban, Reasi, Samba and Udhampur will commence shortly. In April this year, Jambu Zoo shall be thrown open to the people. Home-stay Scheme has been launched with a view to foster employment generation and economic prosperity in rural areas.

    Remarkably, with the launch of the new J&K Film Policy in 2021, Jammu and Kashmir has emerged as the favourite shooting destination for film industry and permission has been granted for shooting of more than 150 films and web series in less than two years.

    Jammu and Kashmir as a tourist destination that is now being promoted on all possible global forums and that is the reason it witnessed highest-ever tourist footfall and air traffic in recent years.

    After registering a record tourist footfall this year, mainly in leisure and adventure tourism due to sustained efforts of the Tourism Department and the stakeholders during the last two years, Jammu and Kashmir is now opening to MICE tourism.

    Over the past couple of months, many corporate delegations have visited Kashmir and many more are planned for the coming seasons. Executives from travel giants visit the Valley with their clients and thus Kashmir is emerging as corporate tourist destination also.

     Jammu and Kashmir has all adequate infrastructure, services and tourism package required for MICE tourism and Department is working in a holistic manner to attract tourists in all segments through a whole range of promotions, road shows, and events besides the introduction of new adventure activities and destinations to sustain the interest of visitors is also being done by the Administration on regular basis.(GNS)

    [ad_2]
    #Progressing #Tourism #industry #booming #record #tourist #footfall #witnessed

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Egypt’s tourism revenues hit record high in Q1 of FY 2022/23

    Egypt’s tourism revenues hit record high in Q1 of FY 2022/23

    [ad_1]

    Cairo: The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) said the country’s tourism revenues increased by 43.5 per cent to a record high of $4.1 billion in the first quarter of the fiscal year 2022-2023.

    Egypt’s fiscal year begins at the beginning of July and ends at the end of June the following year, reports Xinhua news agency.

    The number of tourists visiting Egypt from July to September last year rose by 52.2 per cent to 3.4 million, while the number of nights tourists spent in the country increased by 47.1 per cent to 43.6 million, the bank said in an official statement.

    Over the past few years, Egypt’s tourism sector, a main source of national income and hard currency for the country, has been greatly affected by the country’s fight against terrorism, especially after a Russian plane crashed over the Sinai Peninsula in October 2015, killing all 224 passengers and crew on board.

    With improving security conditions in Egypt, tourism gradually recovered in the following years to bring Egypt a record high of $13 billion in revenues in 2019, when more than 13 million tourists visited the North African country, before tourist numbers declined again because of the Covid-19 lockdowns.

    The ongoing Russia-Ukraine war has also cast a shadow on the sector as the two countries have been among top sources of tourists to the country boasting many historic monuments.

    Abdel Fattah al-Assi, a former assistant minister of tourism and antiquities for hotel facilities control, attributed the revival of the tourism industry to the incentives provided for foreign travel agencies and the country’s improved stability and security, among other factors.

    “After the Covid-19 lockdowns, more people will spend their holidays abroad, and Egypt has many advantages for tourists as it enjoys a nice weather and offers reasonable prices (for tourists),” al-Assi told Xinhua.

    The ongoing development in Egypt, such as better roads, less traffic and the renovation of most tourist destinations, will attrack more visitors, he noted.

    [ad_2]
    #Egypts #tourism #revenues #hit #record #high

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Turkey’s tourism revenues soar in 2022

    Turkey’s tourism revenues soar in 2022

    [ad_1]

    Ankara: Turkey’s tourism revenues reached $46.28 billion in 2022, registering a year-on-year increase of 53.4 per cent, according to figures released by the Turkish Statistical Institute.

    Nearly 44.56 million foreign tourists visited Turkey in 2022, an increase of 80.3 percent from a year earlier, according to figures released by Turkey’s Culture and Tourism Ministry on Tuesday.

    Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city by population, was the top choice for foreign visitors, welcoming more than 16 million tourists in 2022, according to the Ministry as quoted by Xinhua news agency report.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Turkeys #tourism #revenues #soar

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hungary reports strong tourism rebound in 2022

    Hungary reports strong tourism rebound in 2022

    [ad_1]

    Budapest: Hungary’s tourism sector saw a strong recovery in 2022, with the number of overnight stays in the country’s commercial accommodations increasing by almost 40 percent year-on-year to nearly 40 million, the authorities said.

    “The number of overnight stays was only 5 percent fewer than in 2019 before the (Covid-19) pandemic,” Zoltan Guller, Director of the Hungarian Tourism Agency, said on Monday.

    Last year, revenues from commercial lodging increased by 52 percent year-on-year to 668 billion Hungarian forints ($1.86 billion), Guller added.

    Overall, the capital city, Budapest, was the most popular tourist destination in Hungary, while the northeastern mountain regions of Matra and Bukk, as well as Lake Balaton, were the most frequently visited destinations among domestic travelers, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Most foreign visitors to Hungary arrived from Germany, followed by the Czech Republic, Romania, the UK, and Poland.

    Guller said that last year’s tourism figures were still lower than those of 2019 due to fewer visitors from the US, Russia, and China. (1 Hungarian forint = 0.0028 US dollar)

    [ad_2]
    #Hungary #reports #strong #tourism #rebound

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Singapore tourism expects to bounce back to pre-Covid level by 2024

    Singapore tourism expects to bounce back to pre-Covid level by 2024

    [ad_1]

    Singapore: Driven by strong demands from key markets like India, Indonesia and Malaysia, the Singapore tourism sector recovered strongly in 2022 to exceed the Singapore Tourism Board’s (STB) original forecast of 4 to 6 million visitors last year.

    Last week, STB revealed that tourist arrivals to Singapore reached 6.3 million in 2022 led by Indonesia with 1.1 million visitors, followed by India at 686,000 visitors while 591,000 residents of Malaysia came to Singapore on visitor passes in 2022. In a statement, it added, “barring unexpected circumstances, tourism activity is now expected to recover to pre-pandemic levels by 2024.”

    When the final numbers are in, tourism receipts (TR) are expected to reach between SGD 13.8 to 14.3 billion (USD 10.5 to 10.8 billion) which is 50 to 52 per cent of the pre-pandemic level achieved in 2019.

    TR reached SGD 8.96 billion (USD 6.8 billion) between January to September 2022. The top TR-generating markets were Indonesia, India and Australia, which contributed SGD 1.1 billion, SGD 704 million, and SGD 633 million respectively, excluding sightseeing, entertainment and gaming.

    One of the key measurements for the tourism industry is the length of stay. Singapore is a small island that has in the past been challenged to increase the attractiveness of the city as a destination for travellers. In 2019 which was the last year before the COVID-19 pandemic, the average length of stay was 3.36 days.

    However, in the latest figures released, visitors appear to be spending more time in Singapore compared with the period before the pandemic.

    For the last three quarters of the year (April-December 2022) when Singapore no longer required quarantine for fully-vaccinated travellers, the average length of stay was approximately 4.81 days. Indians stayed an average of 8.08 days, which is almost twice the overall average length of stay.

    Indian visitors to Singapore are also generally more youthful. For Indian residents, those aged between 25 to 34 form the largest group of visitors in 2022 with 199,940. Those between 35- and 44 years old form the second largest group with 151,300, while those aged from 45 to 54 are third biggest with 82,340.

    Two of the key factors which increased the post-pandemic appeal of the country were the focus on bringing more events to Singapore and new attractions.

    Following the easing of border restrictions in the second quarter of 2022, the number of MICE (meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions) events grew exponentially as the city was one of the first in the region to fully reopen.

    Marquee international events returned to Singapore, including Food and Hotel Asia – Food & Beverage and Food and Hotel Asia – HoReCa, which took place as two dedicated trade shows for the first time, ITB Asia, and Singapore Fintech Festival, which attracted a record turnout from over 115 countries. STB also secured new events like FIND: Design Fair Asia as well as Global Health Security Conference 2022 and the 14th World Stroke Congress.

    Sports and leisure events also recovered strongly. The Singapore Formula 1 Grand Prix was held for the first time in three years in 2022 and drew a record crowd of 302,000, half of which were from abroad. Other events include the Tour de France Prudential Singapore Criterium (held for the first in Southeast Asia), the Singapore Food Festival, Christmas Wonderland, Christmas on A Great Street at Orchard Road, the Marina Bay Singapore Countdown and ZoukOut Singapore.

    Singapore also ramped up new attractions and experiences during the pandemic to attract more foreign visitors. These include the Children’s Museum Singapore; Avatar: The Experience at Gardens by the Bay, Sentosa’s Night Luge, Scentopia, Wings of Time and Central Beach Bazaar; a new gallery at ArtScience Museum’s Future World: “Exploring New Frontiers”; A Minion’s Perspective Experience at Resorts World Sentosa; Mr Bucket Chocolaterie at Dempsey; and the Singapore Night Safari’s new amphitheatre and refreshed Creatures of the Night show.

    STB expects the tourism sector to continue its growth momentum this year, on the back of increasing flight connectivity and capacity, and China’s gradual reopening. International visitor arrivals are expected to reach around 12 to 14 million visitors, bringing in approximately SGD 18 to 21 billion (USD 13.6 to 15.9 billion) in tourism receipts – around two-thirds to three-quarters of the levels in 2019.

    New or refreshed attractions are also planned for 2023, such as Bird Paradise @ Mandai Wildlife Reserve, and new experiences in Orchard Road such as the Trifecta integrated sports facility. STB will also support business and leisure events monetary over the next two years.

    Keith Tan, Chief Executive, STB, said: “Our 2022 tourism performance underscores Singapore’s appeal as a leading business and leisure destination for post-pandemic travellers. To sustain our growth in 2023 and beyond, we will expand our partnerships, build up a rich year-round calendar of events, ramp up investment in new and refreshed products and experiences, and continue to support industry efforts to build the capabilities they need to meet consumer demands.”

    [ad_2]
    #Singapore #tourism #expects #bounce #preCovid #level

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘It’s not medical tourism, it’s desperation’: rising number of Britons resort to treatment abroad

    ‘It’s not medical tourism, it’s desperation’: rising number of Britons resort to treatment abroad

    [ad_1]

    Cathy Rice had been in all-consuming pain for 18 months when she decided to fly to Lithuania. “I was going up the stairs on my hands and knees. I couldn’t get to the shop. I had no quality of life,” she says.

    Rice, 68, who has four grandchildren, had been told she needed a knee replacement for an injury caused by osteoarthritis but – like millions of NHS patients – faced a gruelling wait.

    At a clinic in Kaunas, Lithuania’s second largest city, the operation was arranged within weeks and cost €6,800 (£5,967) – around half the cost in the UK. The price included a pre-travel consultation, return flights, airport transfers, two nights in an en suite hospital room, pre-surgery check-ups and post operative physio.

    “I thought, ‘Just look at your choices. You can stay here and be in this kind of pain for another couple of years or you can take a decision’,” Rice says.

    The former health sector worker, from Glasgow, is one of a growing number of Britons going abroad for routine medical care. She had never gone private before and never had a desire to. But last week, a year after the first surgery, she returned to Lithuania to have the same procedure on her other knee. This time, she says the wait she faced on the NHS was three years.

    She explains tearfully that to cover the costs of the surgeries in Lithuania, she sold her house. “People think that if you’re doing this you’ve got a wonderful pension or you’re very well off. But the driver here is that people are in pain,” she says. “This is not medical tourism; it’s medical desperation.”

    In the basement gym of the same hospital in Kaunas – a gleaming white clinic overlooked by Soviet-era apartment buildings – another patient, William Grover, 79, is stepping on and off an aerobic block.

    William Grover having physiotherapy at Nordclinic.
    William Grover paid just over £6,000 to have a hip replacement abroad. He was quoted £15,000 by a private hospital in the UK. Photograph: Oleg Nikishin/The Observer

    The grandfather of eight, from Portsmouth, is two days post-surgery following a right hip replacement that cost €7,000 (£6,146). The former construction worker decided to fly the two and a half hours from Luton to Lithuania to have the procedure at the Nordorthopaedics clinic after facing an uncertain wait on the NHS. He had been quoted £15,000 by a private hospital in the UK.

    “I always used the NHS. I never thought I would need to go private. But my hip was getting worse and worse and I got to the stage where I was just thinking, ‘What am I going to do?’” he says.

    Battered by the pandemic, workforce shortages and a chronic lack of social care capacity, the UK’s health systems are under acute strain. The latest NHS figures show that 7.19 million people were waiting for treatment in England alone in November, with 406,575 waiting over a year. There were more than 600,000 patients waiting in Scotland for planned procedures at the end of last September and there were more than 750,000 waiting to start treatment in Wales in October.

    A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said it was “working tirelessly” to ensure people get the care they need and that the NHS had “virtually eliminated waits of more than two years for treatment”.

    The Welsh government said it had “ambitious targets” to tackle delays for planned care while the Scottish government said it was opening four national treatment centres that could provide capacity for over “12,250 additional procedures, dependent on workforce”.

    But a growing number of people are resorting to going private. Google trends data shows UK searches for “private healthcare” are at a record high while figures from the Private Healthcare Information Network show the number self-paying for private acute care has increased by more than a third compared with before the pandemic, with a 193% rise in those paying for hip replacements.

    For those who cannot afford private care in Britain, travelling abroad can be appealing. In some countries in Europe, operations can be as little as half the price of the equivalent treatment in the UK, even after factoring in extras like post-operative rehabilitation.

    Nordclinic clinic in Lithuania.
    Nordclinic clinic in Lithuania. The country has a good reputation for healthcare and is relatively inexpensive and easy to reach. Photograph: Oleg Nikishin/The Observer

    There is no reliable source of data on outbound UK medical tourism, but the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has estimated that about 248,000 UK residents went abroad for medical treatment in 2019, compared with 120,000 in 2015.

    For years, the medical tourism market has been dominated by people crossing borders for tummy tucks, dental work and other cosmetic treatments. But Keith Pollard, editor in chief of International Medical Travel Journal, says there is evidence of an increased demand for core medical care, with NHS waiting lists “driving business”.

    Clinics in Lithuania, Hungary and Spain are all reporting a rise in demand for elective procedures like hip operations, he says. “There are rising numbers of people who are opting out of the NHS to self-pay and can afford private treatment in the UK. There is another group of patients who might not be able to afford that, but may pay £3,000 or £4,000 for a procedure overseas.”

    Lithuania, whose total population is a third of the size of London’s, has become increasingly popular because it is easy to reach, relatively inexpensive, and has developed a good reputation among international patients.

    This year 500 patients are expected to visit Nordclinic in Kaunas for orthopaedic surgeries alone, including hip and knee replacements, achilles tendon repair and foot and ankle surgery, up from 392 last year and compared with 150 before Covid. The clinic also has a branch offering general surgery, including hernia repairs and gallbladder surgery. In January so far, five Britons have had their gallbladders removed.

    Before they travel, patients have a remote consultation, fill in a health questionnaire and supply relevant scans and blood test results. When they return, they are expected to have an x-ray after three months which is sent back to the clinic. If something were to go wrong, patients would be entitled to further free treatment to address the issues. Other clinics, like the nearby Gijos Klinikos, a sprawling hospital with wards like hotel rooms, make the same promise.

    Orthopaedic surgeon Sarunas Tarasevicius prepares for surgery.
    Orthopaedic surgeon Sarunas Tarasevicius says nearly all his international patients are English. Photograph: Oleg Nikishin/The Observer

    Prof Sarunas Tarasevicius, an orthopaedic surgeon at Nord, says that when he began working there a decade ago, virtually none of the international patients he treated were from the UK. Now nearly all of them are, mostly from England. “Often they are elderly and they should be going to hospitals near their home. But still, somehow they make the decision,” he says. “Some people are borrowing money from their kids.”

    Tarasevicius says that before Brexit, patients could get the costs for surgery like hip replacements abroad reimbursed if the NHS could not provide them in a “reasonable” timeframe – usually around six months. Funding for pre-planned care has now become more difficult to access, but still the patients come. “We were expecting a drop-off after Brexit, but it didn’t happen,” he says.

    About 100km away in the capital, Vilnius, the Medical Diagnostic and Treatment Centre is also in demand among Britons. The four-floor hospital treats around 150,000 patients a year, about 5,000 of whom are from the UK. Most want health check-ups – diagnostic tests like MRIs and scans. Others come for orthopaedic surgery.

    Deividas Praspaliauskas, the chief executive, says UK requests have remained at a similar level to before the pandemic but demand from Lithuanian patients has spiked in the same period. “People are planning visits from the UK and we don’t have enough capacity to treat them all,” he says.

    The Gijos Klinikos clinic in Kaunas.
    The Gijos Klinikos clinic in Kaunas. Photograph: Oleg Nikishin/The Observer

    Maja Swinder, patient co-ordinator at EuroTreatMed, a medical travel agency, has observed a similar trend in Poland, with patients from the UK travelling for orthopaedic surgery. “Those patients were considered non-urgent cases under the NHS, and some of them had their surgeries postponed several times,” she says. “People were waiting in pain [and] some became wheelchair-bound.”

    One private hospital, KCM clinic in Jelenia Góra in south-western Poland, says orthopaedic operations for UK patients were 20% to 30% higher in 2022 versus 2019.

    In France, Carine Briat-Hilaire, chief executive and co-founder of France Surgery, a medical travel facilitator in Toulouse, said her company was seeing high demand from UK patients seeking cardiology care as well as orthopaedic surgery. “Before Brexit, English people came to France for healthcare purposes because they were reimbursed by the NHS. Now, they come to France because of the skyrocketing waiting lists in the UK,” she says.

    Spotting a market, some clinics are ramping up their sales efforts. Acibadem, a leading healthcare group in Turkey, held an event at the Royal College of Surgeons in London last week to mark the opening of its UK office, which promotes its medical services. Online, clinics in Europe pay for ads that pop up when people google terms like “hip replacement” while brokerages sell treatment packages offering to send patients to Thailand and India for cut-price care.

    The UK government advises patients to ensure any hospital or clinic they visit is properly regulated and that they have insurance that covers pre-planned medical care abroad. Patients should also consider potential language barriers and any aftercare they will need on returning to the UK, the NHS says.

    Samantha Barker resorted to crowdfunding to pay for treatment.
    Samantha Barker resorted to crowdfunding to pay for treatment.

    Patients who travelled abroad said they considered the risks and decided they were worth taking.

    “At the end of the day it’s benefiting my quality of life,” says Stuart Yeandle, 70, from Ceredigion, western Wales, who had a total hip replacement in Lithuania last week after facing a “three or four year wait” at home. He says that while he will have an appointment with an NHS nurse to remove the staples, the net benefit to the health service outweighs any perceived negatives. “It’s helping the NHS in reducing numbers and allowing people who can’t afford it to get it done sooner,” he says.

    For many others who are waiting, paying for quicker access is an option that remains out of reach. The number of Britons using crowdfunding for private medical expenses has surged in the last five years. But while hundreds of campaigns are live – for treatments ranging from hip operations to ACL repair and brain aneurysm surgery – many never reach their target.

    Last year, Samantha Barker, 25, launched a GoFundMe appeal to pay for surgery at a specialist hospital in Romania after learning that the wait in Malvern, Worcestershire, would be at least 65 weeks.

    The gym instructor says she was in agony due to endometriosis, a condition where tissue grows on the outside of the womb or uterus which can cause severe pain and infertility. “I’d be screaming in the bathroom at 2am on the floor, in so much pain I couldn’t speak. They’d call an ambulance and say you need to go to A&E, then give me morphine and tell me to go back home,” she says. “There was just no hope.”

    In the end, she did not come close to her £3,000 goal, so could not afford to go. Instead she had a less preferred, temporary treatment at a UK private clinic which gave her the option of repaying the £4,022 over 24 months.

    It has improved her quality of life, but she has heard from others that for less money, the standard of care in Romania would have been “so much more than the UK”. “If I have to have surgery again I’d definitely try and have it abroad,” she says.

    [ad_2]
    #medical #tourism #desperation #rising #number #Britons #resort #treatment
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )