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$4b spent a year on healthcare abroad

Bangladeshis spend around $4 billion abroad every year for healthcare, according to Malik Talha Ismail Bari, senior vice president of the Dhaka Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI).
This is due to a lack of specialised treatment, trust in doctors and advanced technology within the country alongside costs being comparatively lower abroad, he said.
Bari, also a director of United Hospital, was delivering a keynote paper through a presentation at a seminar, styled “Reversing the Outbound Healthcare Tourism”, at the DCCI yesterday.
There are 5,461 private hospitals and clinics in Bangladesh, of which 1,810 are within Dhaka division, he said.
People in rural areas are deprived of quality and adequate healthcare services while pressure is created for an influx of patients at healthcare facilities in Dhaka.
Limited infrastructure, a lack of skilled workforce, quality and safety concerns, low doctor-patient ratio and long waiting periods are some of the bottlenecks to access advanced healthcare in Bangladesh, he added.
Bari informed that Bangladesh allocated Tk 30,125 crore, or 3.78 percent of its national budget, for public healthcare in fiscal year 2024-25.
Pre-capita health expenditure, or annual government spending for healthcare per person, is $110 in Bangladesh whereas $401 in South Asia, he said.
Patients sometimes go abroad for healthcare services due to a lack of facilities, trust and comfort and reversing this trend requires formulation of a proper plan and identifying the bottlenecks, said National Professor AK Azad Khan.
“Since medical science is an ever-changing process, we need to have a proper curriculum to adopt the best technological advancements,” said Khan, also president of the Diabetic Association of Bangladesh.
He also stressed on the standardisation of laboratories, adequate budgetary allocation, facilitating more research and strengthening the Bangladesh Medical and Dental Council (BM&DC), which is the regulatory authority for medical and dental education in Bangladesh.
Trust is a crucial factor when considering this sector’s development, said Rezaul Karim Kazal, professor of the obstetrics and gynaecology department at Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University.
Quality hospitals should be established in rural areas for wider coverage alongside customised services for all types of patients, he added.
Only doctors should be appointed through Bangladesh Civil Service for the public health administration to be run efficiently, said Syed Abdul Hamid, professor at the Institute of Health Economics of the University of Dhaka.
Moreover, a “health service commission” should be formed similar to the Bangladesh Judicial Service Commission, which assess the suitability of persons for entry-level appointments as assistant judges or judicial magistrates, he added.
Liaquat Hossain, registrar of the BM&DC, suggested that the national policy for registering foreign doctors to practice in Bangladesh could be simplified.
Of the 1,34,000 doctors in Bangladesh, only 33,000 are in public service, said Abul Bashar Md Jamal, a former professor of surgery at Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
However, over 10,000 foreign students are studying in different public and private medical colleges here, he added.
Members of middle-income households are increasingly seeking healthcare services abroad, mainly for a lack of confidence and satisfaction, said DCCI President Ashraf Ahmed.
Only a few types of advanced treatments, such as robotic surgery, are available locally, he said.
The trend can be reversed by outperforming regional competition, ensuring customer satisfaction and enhancing quality of medical services, reliability and branding initiatives, he added.
“We need to be more open to foreign doctors, nurses, medical technologists and other specialists,” opined Ahmed.

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