Property consultant JLL estimates at least 70 new hospitals need to be built in five key Middle East cities by 2022.
The company’s newly released report
on the regional healthcare sector concludes that the Middle East is
lagging behind other developed economies in terms of per capita spending
on healthcare and the provision of hospital beds.
Faced with a shortage of hospitals, clinics and other healthcare
facilities, an ageing population and the rise of medical tourism, JLL
estimates the cities of Cairo, Jeddah, Riyadh, Dubai and Abu Dhabi need
to add a combined 10,500 hospital beds over the next five years, which
equates to 70 new hospitals, just to maintain the current per capita bed
provision.
JLL says the biggest requirement is in Cairo, which needs an
additional 4,800 beds and 32 hospitals by 2022. Next is Riyadh, with
2,250 beds and 15 hospitals. The figures for Dubai are 1,050 beds and 7
hospitals, while Abu Dhabi has slightly higher requirements at 1,350
beds and 9 hospitals. The figures given for Jeddah are the same as for
Dubai.
Even with this additional capacity, the per capita provision of
hospital beds in the region will remain far behind the OECD average of
4.8 beds per 1,000 people, at 1.9 beds. To reach the OECD average, JLL
says 470,000 additional beds would be required across the same five
major cities by 2022, which equates to 3,130 new hospitals.
With such huge requirements, JLL says the healthcare market is highly
attractive for real estate investors, offering a chance to diversify
their portfolios in a sector not tied to the performance of the economy.
source
Friday, September 15, 2017
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