North Korea to launch medical tourism, targeting
visitors from China
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[December 06, 2019]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea, one of the
world's most reclusive states, plans to branch out into medical tourism
next year, offering foreign visitors, most likely from China, treatments
including cataract surgery, dental implants and therapy for tumors.
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The ruling party's Rodong Sinmun newspaper reported on Friday the
recent launch of the "Treatment Tourism Exchange Corporation", aimed
at capitalizing on the "rising demand for tourism, including medical
care, in line with an international trend".
The new state entity will operate health clinics near hot springs,
whose mineral waters, it said, can help treat neuralgia, arthritis,
and heart and skin ailments.
Private tourism is one of the few remaining areas of business not
blocked by sanctions imposed on North Korea over its nuclear and
missile programs.
As many as 350,000 Chinese tourists have visited North Korea this
year, potentially netting the authorities up to $175 million,
according to some analysts.
Last month, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited a hot spring
resort nearing completion in the central alpine town of Yangdok, one
of major construction projects at the heart of his drive to build a
"self-reliant" economy.
Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean studies
in Seoul, described the medical tourism campaign as propaganda
designed at showing progress, while adding that it could appeal to
some Chinese tourists.
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"North Korea primarily offers natural tourist attractions and
appears to believe they can be a money maker if combined with
elements of oriental medicine, which many Chinese people like," he
said.
A recent report by a government-affiliated health institute in
neighboring South Korea said North Korea was struggling to provide
basic health care.
"The reality is that primary-care providers — local clinics and
doctors — are so short of basic equipment and supplies that they
barely provide what may be called medical consultation," it
concluded in the report on the state of the health sector in the
North.
"The situation is not much better for secondary-care providers
including state hospitals in cities and counties," it said.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting and editing by Josh
Smith & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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