Foreigners Spend $1B on Medical Treatments Service in Vietnam in 2014: Ministry
Foreign patients paid an estimated $1 billion for treatments services at medical facilities in Vietnam last year, the Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon newspaper reported on Jan 6, citing the Ministry of Health. Most medical treatments chosen by foreign people and overseas Vietnamese at local hospitals were in-vitro fertilization, laparoscopic techniques, kidney transplant, heart surgery and hi-tech medical services. Data of the Ho Chi Minh City Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility Association (HOSREM) showed the city’s three major centers specializing in in-vitro fertilization took care of more than 500 patients a year, including Tu Du Maternity Hospital and privately owned Van Hanh and An Sinh hospitals. The HCM City National Hospital of Odonto-Stomatology and the Odonto-Maxillo-Facial Hospital in HCMC served over 2,000 foreign and overseas Vietnamese patients. Last year also saw nearly 1,200 foreigners admitted to Cho Ray Hospital and around 19,000 others to the HCM City Medical University Hospital. There were many patients coming from countries with developed medicine, such as the U.S., Australia, South Korea, Russia and Japan. The Department of Medical Service Administration under the ministry said foreigners use medical services in Vietnam thanks to good treatment and affordable cost. For example, the ratio of successful in-vitro fertilization at Vietnamese hospitals now is 50%-65% and the cost of kidney transplant in Vietnam is some VND200 million (over $9,350), only one-fourth of the cost which patients have to pay at foreign hospitals. (Saigon Times Daily Jan 6)