Monday 4 November 2013

5 November, 2013

‘Make medical visa process simpler’ – experts suggest

In order to attract more tourists coming for medical care, the government needs to make the medical visa application online and simpler, experts at a health summit said . ‘The process of medical tourism visa is very elaborate in our country. The person can get a visa only for 12 months and with only three entries. So, as long as the government makes the process clearer and facilitates online application, medical tourism cannot grow well in the country,’ said Harish Pillai, chief executive officer, Aster Medcity.
‘The formalities regulating the visa need to be made simpler and especially the rules related to the extension of visa need a lot of rethinking,’ said Sanjay Cherian, vice president of Frontier Lifeline Hospital. The experts were speaking at the fourth edition of the Kerala Health Tourism meet which ended. Apart from highlighting the medical visa problem, the experts also spoke about the need for easing health insurance business in India.
‘Currently only 15 percent of the population have medical insurance in the country. As the middle class rises in the country, there is an urgent need to increase the scope for health insurance, for which the government needs to ease the insurance business,’ said Hoosh Mires, operations director of Freedom Healthnet, an insurance company.
Though, the market for medical tourism is expected to grow annually at 30 percent to reach $1.55 billion by 2015, however, it is much lower compared to countries like Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Taiwan which receive more tourists and earn larger revenue from medical tourism. ‘The need for India at present is to engage in elaborate marketing,’ said Charles Stanford, senior director, LLH hospital Dubai.
Though India has good expertise, low cost and lesser waiting period, there is a need to develop the infrastructure, improve hygiene and standarisation of the accreditation process so that tourists’ trust could be gained.
05.11.2013




Need to keep pace with international drug standards: Health Minister

There have been rapid changes in the standard of drugs all over the world, and it is necessary to keep pace with the changes through regulatory requirements, union Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said on Monday. Azad was speaking at a function to release the seventh edition of Indian Pharmacopoeia 2014 – A book of Drug Standards, at Nirman Bhawan. The minister said: ‘There have been rapid changes in the standard of drugs all over the world, and to keep pace with the regulatory requirements, it was felt necessary by all the stakeholders to bring out the new edition of Indian Pharmacopoeia 2014 at the earliest.’
He noted that Indian Pharmacopoeia 2014 has been considerably revised and improved by introducing advanced technology and experimental methods widely adopted in India and abroad. Azad hoped that Indian Pharmacopoeia 2014 will be able to fulfil the mission of the Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission to promote public health, both in India and other countries, using drugs manufactured in India. The seventh edition of the Indian Pharmacopoeia has been published by the Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission (IPC) in fulfilment of the requirements of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, an official release said here. It prescribes the standards for drugs produced and marketed in India and thus contributes in the control and assurance of the quality of the medicines.
05.11.2013







When I do good, I feel good. When I do bad, I feel bad. That is my religion

Abraham Lincoln

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