Brazil to Promote Medical Tourism Overseas

The Brazilian Export and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex) and the Brazil Heath Consortium sign on Thursday, June 22, an agreement to promote exports of health services.

The intention is international promotion of the qualities and good cost-benefit relations of Brazilians services.

The agreement is going to focus on various fronts: the attraction of foreign patients for treatment in Brazil, the execution of consultancy services in hospital management and architecture for assembly and maintenance of hospitals and clinics abroad.

In the last few years, Brazil presented record growth in the number of organ transplants and has become the country with the largest number of this kind of procedure executed by public systems in the world.

Figures show that there was a 37% increase between 2002 and 2004, when Brazil reached the figure of 10,920 transplants. In 2002, a total of 7,981 procedures took place.

Between January and March this year, preliminary figures show that a total of 2,500 transplants took place throughout the country. The kind of transplant that grew most was that of corneas, with an increase of 52.6% – from 3,496, in 2002, to 5,335, in 2004.

The number of donations also rose – from 1,183 in 2003 to 1,408 in 2004 – as did the total of procedures in practically all states.

Twenty-one states and the Federal District, where Brazilian capital Brasí­lia is located, currently have transplant centers. The units in the states of Acre, Rondônia and Tocantins, all in the north of the country, are currently in the phase of implementation.

The Ministry of Health relates this increase to greater public awareness and to the participation of the society in the donation and transplant process, and also mentions campaigns providing incentives to donations.

The public health network counts on 1,260 medical teams and 551 units registered for transplants. In 2004, approximately US$ 167.1 million were turned to organ and tissue transplants.

This value is 16.61% greater than the US$ 143.3 million invested in the previous year. Currently, a transplant costs, on average, US$ 14,600 to the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS).

Anba, ABr

You May Also Like

Brazilian Troops Keep an Eye on Haitian Elections

Exactly two years after former president, Jean Bertrand Aristide, fled the country, Haiti will ...

President Lula Will Check Brazil’s Research on Antarctic Base

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, is expected this Friday, February ...

Idiocy Test

Maria Clara Machados’s work will not end with her passing. Maria Clara Mourthé, 42, ...

Brazil Building Industry Puts a Show in the Middle East

Brazil is showing the world the potential of the Brazilian building industry. A group ...

Studio program at Brazil's Radiobrás TV

Look Out for the New BBC – the Brazilian Broadcasting Corporation

In December 2 this year Brazilians should be able to switch on their TV ...

Isn’t Ever Enough?

The present battle for power and positions stems from the fragmented nature of Brazil’s ...

Brazil Has Killed the Beautiful Game. Thank God for Argentina!

Brazil and the beautiful game have been synonymous for decades now. Brazil’s people and ...

19 Countries in Brazil to Buy Her Shrimp

Entrepreneurs from 19 countries, including Spain, France, Italy, and England, are participating in the ...

LETTERS

Who is the Brazilian teenager? He/she is passionate and apathetic, abstemious and drug-addicted, criminal ...

LETTERS

By In Brazil the name Aurélio is synonymous with dictionary. So famous is the ...