A doctor attends to a patient. FILE
By NEVILLE OTUKI
In Summary
- FrontEnders will offer advice and logistics support that will see patients suffering from chronic diseases access treatment at top Indian hospitals.
An Indian healthcare firm will next year open
its first African office in Nairobi to offer information to the growing
number of East Africans seeking medical care in Asian hospitals.
FrontEnders will offer advice and logistics
support that will see patients suffering from chronic diseases such as
cancer access treatment at top Indian hospitals.
The firm is seeking to tap into the growing
medical tourism that has seen India emerge as a favourite destination
for patients from Kenya and other Afican countries seeking
cost-effective healthcare.
It will earn a fee from Indian hospitals in which local patients will be checked in for treatment.
“We will set up our office in Nairobi in March
next year to bring our services closer to people,” said Mr Govindaraj
Srinivasan, the chief consultant, in an interview.
Physical barriers
Some of the specific services to be offered by the
firm include medical diagnosis, travel arrangements, cost estimation of
anticipated treatment and booking of hotels or service apartments.
The diagnosis will be done through local partner
hospitals or telemedicine — where medical information is transferred
through the phone or the internet to surmount physical barriers between a
doctor and patient.
India’s large pool of doctors and hospitals
offering low-cost treatment of cancer, high blood pressure, and other
chronic ailments have attracted thousands of patients from Kenya and
elsewhere.
Mr Srinivasan said cancer treatment could cost
about Sh50,000 in India compared to millions of shillings locally,
making it a cost-effective option.
Highly acclaimed
It is these advantages that Kenyan patients are
increasingly seeking, with FrontEnders stepping in to connect them with
the low-cost hospitals.
The consultancy firm has entered arrangements with
50 top medical facilities in India including highly acclaimed Apollo
Hospitals, Medicity, Global Hospitals and Primex Scans and Labs.
Locally, the firm has ties with MP Shah, Guru
Nanak and Aga Khan hospitals and patients are only referred to Indian
facilities if the situation is beyond the capacity of local facilities.
India is estimated to have more than half a
million doctors and 700,000 nurses, with its hospitals able to offer
surgical procedures at one-tenth the cost of its peers in developed
countries.
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