There is a variety of hospitals in India spread across country's length and breadth. Starting with money point of view...from free treatment to semi-paid to fully paid treatment; from quality point of view...temporary quick relief first aids to world class complete treatment in star studded atmosphere and conditions; multi-speciality, super-speciality and what not - Modern Medical Healthcare, Homoeopathy, Naturopathy, Ayurvedic...etc.
2007-03-12 16:53:51
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answer #1
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answered by helpaneed 7
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In recent years, several private hospitals have opened up that are designed to provide world-class medical care in India. These hospitals utilize some of the best medical equipment that is available world-wide. A specific example of such a hospital is one located in Mumbai, which has been designed per guidelines from the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, to ensure that they meet rigorous international standards. This hospital focuses on patient safety and comfort and has been designed in such a way that will minimize the risk of infection. GSS has carefully evaluated and selected only those hospitals that meet very high international standards to be a part of our network.
2007-03-12 07:15:02
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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there is no difference between the hospitals in US and that in India...
2007-03-12 07:16:40
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answer #3
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answered by Harish Jharia 7
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Well they are medical centres!! If you are wondering about the services.. they depend on each city and the rate of doctors.
2007-03-12 09:20:17
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answer #4
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answered by bαby mc 3
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Delhi
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2007-03-15 04:45:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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India Fosters Growing 'Medical Tourism' Sector
Ray Marcelo
The Financial Times, 2 July 2003
India is promoting the "high-tech healing" of its private healthcare sector as a tourist attraction.
The government hopes to encourage a budding trade in medical tourism, selling foreigners the idea of travelling to India for low-cost but world-class medical treatment.
Naresh Trehan, executive director of Escorts Heart Institute and Research Centre, a leading private healthcare provider, says India has established world-class expertise in practices such as cardiac care, cosmetic surgery, joint replacements and dentistry.
Merging medical expertise and tourism became government policy when finance minister Jaswant Singh, in this year's budget, called for India to become a "global health destination".
If foreigners respond, a new medical tourism industry could be generating revenues of Rs100bn ($2.1bn, €1.9bn, £1.3bn) by 2012, according to a report by McKinsey Consultants and the Confederation of Indian Industry, a business group.
There is no doubt that the Indian medical industry's main appeal is low-cost treatment. Most estimates claim treatment costs in India start at around a tenth of the price of comparable treatment in America or Britain.
For example, in April Madras Medical Mission, a Chennai-based hospital, successfully conducted a complex heart operation on an 87-year-old American patient at a reported cost of $8,000 (€7,000, £4,850) including the cost of his airfare and a month's stay in hospital. The patient claimed that a less complex operation in America had earlier cost him $40,000.
Other procedures such as diagnostic services offer significant cost-savings.
Take the rising popularity of "preventive health screening". At one private clinic in London a thorough men's health check-up that includes blood tests, electro-cardiogram tests, chest x-rays, lung tests and abdominal ultrasound costs £345 ($574, €500). By comparison, a comparable check-up at a clinic operated by Delhi-based healthcare company Max Healthcare costs $84.
Yet cost-savings may not be enough to foster a trade in medical tourism. Unfairly or not, most foreigners would not think of India as a land of good health.
The sight of the country's overcrowded public hospitals, open sewers and garbage-littered streets would unsettle most visitors' confidence about public sanitation standards in India.
Private healthcare providers argue that foreigners can be sheltered from such nastiness, and that the quality of India's corporate hospitals are world-class. "In a corporate hospital, once the door is closed you could be in a hospital in America," says P.V.R.K. Prasad, director-general of the Dr Marri Channa Reddy Human Resource Development Institute.
Vishal Bali, vice-president of Wockhardt Hospitals, points out as proof of quality that the US private health insurers Blue Cross and Blue Shield insure patients treat-ed at his group's hospitals.
The British health insurer Bupa also insures the costs of treatment at Wockhardt hospitals.
Mr Bali adds that Wockhardt is in talks with Britain's National Health Service about outsourcing the treatment of British patients to India.
According to Hari Prasad, vice-president of Apollo Hospitals in Hyderabad, foreigners should have confidence in India's medical system because many Britons and Americans are accustomed to being treated by expatriate Indian doctors.
In any case, most private healthcare providers hold modest ambitions about which foreign patients would come to India seeking treatment.
For instance, of the 5,200 hospital beds run by the Apollo hospital group, about 100 beds are usually occupied by foreign patients, mostly from the Middle East, Africa and countries of south Asia.
Indeed, demand for medical tourism is most likely to come from among the 20m-strong Indian diaspora, says Deep Kalra, chief executive officer of travel agency makemytrip.com.
Mr Kalra says wealthy first- and second-generation expatriate Indians are aware of the rise of India's high quality, low-cost hospitals.
He estimates there is a potential market of some 12m expatriate Indians who would combine regular visits to India and save time and money by undergoing non-emergency procedures such as eye operations, dental work, cosmetic surgery and knee surgery. Mr Kalra's agency plans to launch a medical tourism package later this year.
Still, some remain sceptical about medical tourism's potential. Sumanjit Chaudhry, an executive at India's Max Healthcare group, says: "I imagine if someone is sick and ill they won't want to have a holiday. You'll hardly see a guy who comes here for heart surgery leaping off and going to the beach."
Please visit http://www.hospitalsindia.org/
2007-03-12 07:34:56
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answer #6
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answered by Hyder 2
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