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    HOMESPHNEWSTourismTMC Iloilo Becomes Western Visayas' First DOT‑Accredited Hospital for Medical Tourism

    TMC Iloilo Becomes Western Visayas' First DOT‑Accredited Hospital for Medical Tourism

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    The Medical City Iloilo became the first hospital in Western Visayas accredited by the Department of Tourism for medical tourism, with the certificate handed by DOT‑6 Regional Director Crisanta Marlene Rodriguez to CEO Dr. Felix Ray Villa. The accreditation positions Iloilo as an emerging medical tourism destination offering world‑class care alongside its UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy and ASEAN Clean Tourist City credentials. TMC Iloilo previously performed Western Visayas' first intravascular lithotripsy and won multiple international awards.

    Tourism

    Iloilo City

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    ILOILO CITY — The Department of Tourism has formally accredited The Medical City Iloilo for medical tourism, making it the first and only hospital in Western Visayas to receive the certification. DOT‑6 Regional Director Crisanta Marlene "Krisma" Rodriguez handed the accreditation certificate to TMC Iloilo Chief Executive Officer Dr. Felix Ray Villa during a ceremony that positions Iloilo as an emerging destination where world‑class healthcare converges with Ilonggo hospitality and vibrant local culture. For the tourism sector, the accreditation is not merely a hospital achievement. It is a structural addition to Iloilo's destination portfolio—one that opens an entirely new visitor category: the international patient who travels not for a festival or a beach but for a procedure, and who stays for recovery, cuisine, and the calming presence of the Iloilo River Esplanade.

    TMC Iloilo framed the milestone in terms that deliberately bridge healthcare and tourism. "This milestone positions Iloilo as an emerging destination for medical tourism, where world‑class healthcare is seamlessly combined with the warmth of Ilonggo hospitality and the city's vibrant culture," the hospital stated. "With internationally aligned standards, patient‑centered care, and a growing ecosystem of travel and wellness partners, we welcome local and international patients seeking quality care and a healing experience." The accreditation aligns with the renewed push of the Iloilo City government to establish the city as a premier site for medical and wellness tourism in the country and across Southeast Asia.

    A Hospital That Earned the Right to Host the World

    The DOT accreditation did not arrive in a vacuum. It landed on a hospital whose clinical track record includes the first intravascular lithotripsy heart procedure in Western Visayas—a milestone that demonstrated the facility's capacity to perform advanced cardiovascular interventions that previously required referral to Metro Manila. The hospital has also collected international recognition at a pace that signals institutional maturity: it was named Secondary Hospital of the Year at the Healthcare Asia Awards in Malaysia, won the Philippines Business Service Innovation of the Year for its Emergency Medical Services Program, and secured the Philippines Culture Innovation of the Year for its Excellent Patient Experience Program.

    These are not vanity citations. They are independent, third‑party validations that a hospital can deliver outcomes at a standard that international patients and their referring physicians expect. The DOT accreditation process evaluates hospitals across multiple dimensions—facility quality, clinical capability, patient safety protocols, and the integration of hospitality services. By meeting those standards, TMC Iloilo effectively assures medical tourists that they will receive care comparable to what they would find in established medical travel destinations like Singapore, Bangkok, or Kuala Lumpur, at a significantly lower price point.

    The accreditation places TMC Iloilo on the DOT's official registry of accredited medical tourism facilities, a list that international insurance companies, medical travel facilitators, and foreign employers consult when determining where to send patients. It also enables the hospital to participate in DOT‑organized trade missions, familiarization tours, and promotional campaigns targeting source markets such as Guam, Palau, Australia, and the Middle East.

    Iloilo City's Medical Tourism Moment Goes Global

    The accreditation arrives as Iloilo City is actively exporting its medical tourism proposition to international audiences. From April 29 to May 4, 2026, the city joined the DOT's hybrid Sales Mission in Australia and New Zealand as the only local government unit from the Philippines to present a medical and wellness tourism program on an international stage. The roadshow, organized by the DOT's Office of Product and Market Development, gathered healthcare and tourism stakeholders in Sydney, Auckland, and Melbourne.

    The delegation was led by Dr. Candice Tupas, Executive Assistant for Medical Tourism, and Lea Lara, Director of the Iloilo City MICE Center. They presented the city's patient‑concierge capabilities, potential medical‑tourism packages, and market data on outbound Australian demand. "We wanted to benchmark and grab the opportunity to present our services. Should they opt to come here for specific treatments, Iloilo is ready," Lara said. Private sector partners joining the mission included The Medical City Iloilo, St. Paul's Hospital, Healthway Qualimed Hospital Iloilo, Galen X, the Iloilo SPA Association, and a local pharmaceutical firm. Presentations featured specialized services such as IVF, hyperbaric therapy, and wellness spa offerings, all designed to attract international patients.

    Lara added that the delegation received positive interest from travel operators and international buyers, being the first LGU to present a city‑led health and wellness program at the roadshow. The reception suggests that Iloilo's medical tourism pitch—affordable, high‑quality care delivered in a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy with an ASEAN Clean Tourist City seal—is beginning to resonate with markets that have long defaulted to more established Asian medical hubs.

    What Medical Tourism Means for Iloilo's Visitor Economy

    Medical tourists are not ordinary travelers. They stay longer than leisure visitors—often two to four weeks for a procedure plus recovery—and their spending extends beyond the hospital bill to accommodations, meals, local transport, and companion activities. A patient recovering from a cardiac procedure at TMC Iloilo may spend afternoons strolling the Esplanade, dining at restaurants that earned the city its UNESCO gastronomy designation, and purchasing pasalubong at the Terminal Market. Their companions, meanwhile, may explore the city's heritage churches, visit the Living Heritage Museum Tour sites, or take a day trip to the Islas de Gigantes.

    This spending pattern distributes the economic benefit of medical tourism across the entire hospitality ecosystem—hotels, restaurants, transport operators, and retail—rather than concentrating it in the healthcare facility alone. For a city that already hosts over 150 MICE events annually and whose hotel inventory recently expanded with Megaworld's 405‑room Belmont Hotel Iloilo, the addition of medical tourists represents a complementary demand stream that is less seasonal than leisure travel and less vulnerable to the discretionary budget cuts that affect corporate meetings during economic downturns.

    The accreditation also strengthens Iloilo's case as a retirement destination. International retirees and returning OFWs evaluating where to settle increasingly weigh healthcare access alongside cost of living and quality of life. A city with a DOT‑accredited medical tourism hospital can offer the assurance that complex medical needs can be met without leaving the province—a variable that real estate developers and tourism planners alike track closely. TMC Iloilo, with its Level II DOH license and now its DOT accreditation, provides that assurance at a standard that no other hospital in Western Visayas currently matches.


    HOMESPH NEWS

    May 20, 2026

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