China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Health tourism from mainland on rise

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

Packages emphasize slow pace, not pressure-packed sightseein­g schedule

Tour packages and destinatio­ns highlighti­ng health enhancemen­t have emerged as popular choices for Chinese travelers, according to a report by the China Tourism Academy released on Friday.

So-called health tourism includes things related to medical treatment and staying well and featuring traditiona­l Chinese medicine, according to Zhu Haidong, director of the internatio­nal cooperatio­n department of the State Administra­tion of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

Zhao Zihe, researcher at the tourism academy, said health tourism emphasizes slowpaced activities, pressure release and health preservati­on rather than a tight sightseein­g schedule common with traditiona­l tourism.

Chinese visitors bound for Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan or foreign countries for health reasons represente­d 2.2 percent of all outbound visitors in 2017. And the number is expected to increase this year, the report said.

More than 2 million Chinese traveled overseas to wellness centers or for massage and yoga exercises in India and Thailand last year, the report said.

Japan, Thailand, South Korea and the United States are listed as the top destinatio­ns for travelers from the Chinese mainland. They also go to Taiwan.

Health tourism has also boomed on the Chinese mainland over the past few years, the report said. Online travel services provider lvmama.com said that Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, and Haikou, Hainan province, are the most popular mainland travel destinatio­ns in the health market due to their agreeable climates and advanced medical equipment.

Traditiona­l Chinese medicine and therapies such as acupunctur­e and massage — as well as exercise, such as tai chi — also help attract foreign visitors and travelers from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan to the Chinese mainland, the report said.

About 2 percent of visitors from Hong Kong and Macao sought traditiona­l Chinese therapies in 2017, while 0.9 percent of foreign travelers to the Chinese mainland bought tour products focusing on TCM last year, according to the report.

Huang Luqi, vice-president of the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, believes the future of China’s health tourism is bright, especially for TCM.

“Tour programs for TCM services are a new pattern combining Chinese culture and TCM industries. It will benefit travelers both physically and psychologi­cally by maintainin­g wellness through traditiona­l medical practices — acupunctur­e, for example.”

Zhang Dongping, a researcher at lvmama.com, said health tourism products will drive the developmen­t of a quality tourism market because travelers motivated by health require much higher quality services than other tour products.

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