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Archive for the ‘Singapore Health Promotion’ Category

PracticalHealth’s Customised First Aid

Saturday, March 26th, 2011


Every Family should have a first aid kit in their home. But not every family’s kit should be the same, according

to the Singapore Health Promotion Board. The board has a few suggestions to get started.

* Thermometer – Either the traditional glass type or the new electronic kind is an important tool for monitoring fever.

* A small torch – This can be used to find small objects embedded in an ear or nostril, and to look at the back of the throat.

* Materials for treating small wounds – Cotton swabs, antiseptic solution, antibiotic ointment, gauze bandages and adhesive tape to secure it, and bandage scissors.

* Tweezers – For removing splinters and things lodged in the skin.

* Simple medications – Paracetamol, antacids, antihistamines for allergies and runny nose, cough medicine and diarrhea medicine.

After stocking your kit with the basics, customize it with special items your family might need. such as inhalers for asthma. Remember that first aid is simply the first application of care. Keep emergency phone numbers nearby to call in the professionals for serious problems.

Medical Tourism and Travel in Singapore

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

Singapore has become one of the major destinations for international medical tourists. Three agencies, the Economic Development Board, the Singapore Tourism Board and the International Enterprise Singapore, have come together to develop Singapore as one of Asia’s leading health care destinations. Through their cooperative efforts, they successfully attract an average of 200,000 medical tourists to the island state each year, bringing with them revenues of about US $3 billion annually.

Singapore prides itself with having world-class medical facilities, with 11 JCI accredited hospitals. It has a chiefly English-speaking population and is well known for its clean and green structured environment. Many of the doctors and staff have also been trained in major medical centres in the United States and Europe.

Whilst medical costs in Singapore are considerably lower than in the West, they are more expensive compared to some of the surrounding Asian countries, such as Thailand and India. However, Singapore has managed to successfully brand itself above the competition, offering a wide spectrum of health care services in every major field of medicine. Singapore has developed a reputation for it’s expertise in Neurosurgery, Cardiology, Opthalmology, Oncology and Dental Services.

The Singapore Tourism Board works with various travel agencies and health care providers, to provide foreign patients with attractive and affordable health packages. These include air-port transfers, booking of specialist appointments, hospital stays, sight-seeing arrangements etc.

The Parkway Group of Hospitals (Gleneagles, Mount Elizabeth and East Shore Hospitals) is a major service provider in the field of medical travel. Together with Raffles Hospital, Mount Alvernia and the Government-linked Restructured Hospitals (Alexandra Hospital, Singapore General Hospital, National University Hospital, Changi General Hospital and Tan Tock Seng Hospital), they provide a comprehensive and competitive range of services to foreign patients. Most hospitals now have dedicated International Call Centres to cater to this growing demand.

Medical tourism is set to continue growing in the years to come. As the Baby Boomers get older, and more medical issues present themselves, they represent a vast market for high quality, affordable health care. Another factor which favours the growth of the industry is the fact that as many as 43 million Americans are without health insurance and 120 million without dental coverage, who are likely to seek out more affordable healthcare