News

Medical Tourism – MS Treatment in Mexico

travelMedical tourism has a slightly jaded feel to it, with the impression that it is normally about people seeking treatment in other countries either because the cost of it is so expensive in their own, or because some reason their own country does not provided.

There is another aspect to people seeking treatment abroad, where ever they may live, which got often is much more about the chance of survival.

People who live with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) not only have to live with the often debilitating effects of the condition itself, but also with the knowledge that there is very little likelihood of any cure being developed in the foreseeable future.

There is very little hope that much can really change by way of current research results.

This, sadly has been true for quite a while. It has often led to both a very conservative approach to alternative treatments, and often desperation by people who had this condition to try anything which can alleviate or change the effects of it.

One of the more promising trials currently being pioneered involves the use of chemotherapy drugs to effectively wipe out an individual’s complete immune system, and replace it with stem cell transplant’s.

The reality of it seems to be harrowing as it sounds, but it does at least offer some hope some level of improvement for a number of people.

There have been quite a few reports of its in the press recently.

This is a story on the BBC website  of a journalist, Caroline Wyatt, who underwent treatment at a specialist clinic in Mexico.

It gives an incredible insight into both the lead up to undergoing the treatment, and that reality of what is involved in trying to live with the after-effects.

BBC – Mexico MS Medical Tourism

Too Fat to Fly ………..

According to reports in Thailand, Thai Airways Is considering banning people who they considered too large to fit into their new seats in their business class cabins.

Far from being seen as any type of safety or moral hazard, the decision apparently applies to people who have a waistline that is larger than 56 inches, and is needed to cause the seatbelts in the business class cabins have a new feature which is a  seat belt airbag.

Apparently this seat belt airbag will not work with people who have a waste of this circumference, and as such they will be banned from flying with them.

Full report here

Manchester Airport Drop Off Lanes

travelManchester Airport has become one of the first in the UK to scrap free drop off lanes for cars.

Steep charges will start being levied for drop off times of around three or four minutes on all cars simply dropping off passengers whoa are getting flights  from the airport.

The airport authorities insist it is simply the only way to try and deal with the crippling congestion problem that has beset the airport for a long time, with the airport claiming that many drivers are effectively doing circuits of the drop off zone, rather than using a short stay car park.

In any event, the decision will, and has, already proven highly controversial.

Full Story – Click Here

Road Trips – Past, Present and Future

travelFor many people the attraction of a road trip is that it gives them both the time and space to discover for themselves the reality of a particular area, geography, history and future.

A good road trip is likely to be a uniquely personal experience, because it gives the individual or individuals involved the freedom to decide for themselves what they want to see, how they want to see it and what it means to them.

In many ways, a road trip of any decent length is a microcosm of the real joy of the energy of travel, both in terms of exploration and in terms of freedom, both internal and external.

This article in travel and leisure highlights different types of road trips

It is a combination of detail and review, of authenticity and pitch. What it does show, is that a road trip can be pretty much whatever you want it to be, and time allowing, can be an invaluable journey of self expression as well.