| India leaves foreign tourists all smiles21 Jun, 2007, 0332 hrs 
            IST,Vishakha Talreja & Khomba Singh, TNN
 NEW DELHI: 
            American tourist Christina Douglas enjoyed her recent 12-day visit 
            to India. Besides the Taj Mahal what she remembers most is that the 
            country returned her smile. That too for just $3,333 she spent on 
            cosmetic dentistry as compared to $88,888 that it would have cost 
            her in the US. 
 Incredible India is now putting smiles on 
            many faces. Thanks to quality dental treatments available at over 
            70% cheaper than that in the west, globetrotters are thronging the 
            country, to get various dental treatments from root canal surgeries 
            to implants.
 
 Getting 
            cavities filled and teeth repaired are just a small part of the 
            growing medical tourism sector. Tummy tucks with a trip to the Taj, 
            cardiac surgeries followed by spa massages and dental implants after 
            an excursion to Khajuraho - medical tourism has come of age in 
            India. Dental tourism, growing at 30% per annum is one of the 
            fastest growing segment of medical tourism.
 
 Says Jaipur Dental Hospital’s Dr Harvender 
            Singh, “Owing to lower cost as compared to that in UK and US, 
            foreigners opt for India. Cost can be as low as 1/15th at times 
            varying with the type of treatment.” Dental implant is the most 
            common type of treatment that foreign patients avail of.
 
 What has also made dental tourism one of the 
            fastest growing segment of medical tourism, is the fact that dental 
            treatment is not covered by insurance in most countries. Max 
            Hospital’s, head of dentistry department, Ramesh Mathur says, “About 
            90% of the preventive dental treatment is not covered by insurance 
            policies. Many hospitals in India provide world class treatment in 
            terms of laboratory, materials used and also easy and speedy 
            appointments.”
 
 And what 
            about the competition? “Though there is competition from Asian 
            countries such as Malaysia and Indonesia, they cannot match the 
            quality of treatment provided by Indian hospitals,” he added. To woo 
            dental tourists, doctors and tour operators are working in sync.
 
 In India, the procedures are quite speedy as 
            compared to those carried out in the west where there could be a 
            waiting period for some surgical procedures. And then there are 
            cases of incidental dental treatment too. “About 40% of the dental 
            tourists are patients who have come for some other treatment and 
            then decided to have dental treatment done as well,” says Mathur.
 
 With growing market, 
            dental tourism is serious business for many players. For instance 
            Confident Dental Equipment, Bangalore based dental equipment 
            manufacturing company, is setting up a chain of 100 dental 
            hospitals, investing around Rs 500-600 crore, largely to cater to 
            the needs of foreign patients.
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