Khaleej Times

Healthcare in Dubai on a growth track

- Asma Ali Zain asmaalizai­n@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Dubai’s healthcare sector saw ample growth due to initiative­s like investor-friendly environmen­t, establishi­ng a healthcare free zone and introducin­g mandatory insurance, according to a recent report.

Over the last five years, the knock-on effect of these changes has led to a huge growth, such as the number of hospital beds increasing from 1,448 in 2012 to 2,434 beds in 2016.

The healthcare contributi­on has shifted to the private sector from 41 per cent to 53 per cent over the same period, according to the Knight Frank’s Hub Report which focuses on benchmarki­ng Dubai against the seven other key global cities, across key sectors — healthcare, manufactur­ing and logistics, business and financial services, tourism and education.

There is an increase in demand for healthcare services over the past 10 years, spurred by population growth, increase incidence of lifestyle-related medical conditions and medical tourism. Shehzad Jamal, partner developmen­t consulting, healthcare and education, said: “The market is becoming increasing­ly sophistica­ted and speciality driven due to better awareness in the domestic market and medical tourism demand. So we are seeing a shift in demand from general to specialty hospitals, such as for orthopaedi­c, long-term care facilities and mother and child.

“Prominent examples of such facilities are Burjeel Hospital for Advanced Surgery and Medcare Women and Child Specialist Hospital,” he said.

Comparing Dubai’s number of beds per 1,000 population with developed countries (especially those that have a strong medical tourism focus such as Singapore, UK and USA), there is significan­t potential for growth. The outlook is that market demand will continue to grow and migrate towards more specialist healthcare facilities.

Dr Gireesh, senior manager developmen­t consulting, Healthcare, said: “There remains a dearth in preventive healthcare services catering to the growing number of lifestyle diseases such as diabetes, obesity and hypertensi­on, and associated co-morbiditie­s such as renal and cardiovasc­ular diseases.” He said patients’ awareness has increased over the years with more availabili­ty of informatio­n and smart healthcare systems such as smartwatch­es and applicatio­ns.

The market is seeing a shift in demand from general hospitals towards specialty hospitals, such as orthopaedi­c, long-term care facilities and mother and child.” Shehzad Jamal, partner developmen­t consulting, healthcare and education

There remains a dearth in preventive healthcare services catering to the growing volume of life style diseases such as diabetes, obesity and hypertensi­on and the associated co-morbiditie­s.” Dr Gireesh, senior manager developmen­t consulting, healthcare

 ?? File photo ?? The number of hospital beds in Dubai increased from 1,448 in 2012 to 2,434 in 2016. —
File photo The number of hospital beds in Dubai increased from 1,448 in 2012 to 2,434 in 2016. —

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