



West Asia tensions rattle India’s medical tourism, pharma trade
aviation and maritime corridors that connect India with key West Asian markets, complicating travel planning for patients and increasing freight expenses for exporters.While companies have yet to report a sustained demand shock, hospitals and drugmakers say the disruption to mobility and logistics systems underpinning cross-border healthcare and medicine trade raises the risk of softer medical travel volumes and higher export costs if tensions persist.The aviation disruption is particularly significant for India’s medical tourism sector, which recorded approximately 644,387 foreign tourist arrivals in 2024. It is particularly exposed to West Asia, a region that accounts for nearly 18% of inbound patients, or about 115,000 travellers, seeking treatment ranging from complex surgeries to advanced clinical care.As regional airspace comes under heightened security scrutiny, industry leaders say travel uncertainty is beginning to influence patient decision-making.
Nations such as Iraq and Oman have shown steady growth in patient numbers over the last four years, but executives warn that prolonged disruption could slow that momentum.Dr. Aashish Chaudhry, managing director of Aakash Healthcare, said that the evolving tensions involving Israel, Iran, and the US are inevitably impacting medical travel patterns across the region.
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