How this country is emerging as a medical tourism hub | Euronews
Summary
By  Botagoz Marabai Published on 18/03/2026 - 15:00 GMT+1 Share Share Facebook Twitter Flipboard Send Reddit Linkedin Messenger Telegram VK Bluesky Threads Whatsapp Copy/paste the article video embed link below: Copied Kazakhstan is positioning itself as Central Asia’s medical tourism hub. The National Research Oncology Centre is also aiming to become a regional training and research hub for International Atomic Energy Agency programmes in nuclear medicine. “An IAEA mission visited in January to assess our infrastructure and professional capacity,” said Indira Tleulessova, Head of the Centre for Radiation Technologies. “We hope that in the coming years we will become an anchor centre supporting training for countries in the region.” Medical innovation hub “Kazakhstan aims to become a medical innovation hub within the next five years,” said Adlet Tabarov, deputy chair of the Salidat Kairbekova National Scientific Center for Healthcare Development. With internationally accredited clinics, competitive pricing and expanding high-tech treatments such as proton therapy, Kazakhstan is positioning its healthcare sector as a regional destination for international patients. Go to accessibility shortcuts Share Read more East-West Connect How Kazakhstan plans to become Eurasia’s leading crypto hub In partnership with MDQ East-West Connect How women-led SMEs are reshaping Kazakhstan’s economy In partnership with MDQ East-West Connect Kazakhstan advances nuclear projects and research hubs for energy In partnership with MDQ Medicine Tourism Health Kazakhstan
By  Botagoz Marabai Published on 18/03/2026 - 15:00 GMT+1 Share Share Facebook Twitter Flipboard Send Reddit Linkedin Messenger Telegram VK Bluesky Threads Whatsapp Copy/paste the article video embed link below: Copied Kazakhstan is positioning itself as Central Asia’s medical tourism hub. The National Research Oncology Centre is also aiming to become a regional training and research hub for International Atomic Energy Agency programmes in nuclear medicine. “An IAEA mission visited in January to assess our infrastructure and professional capacity,” said Indira Tleulessova, Head of the Centre for Radiation Technologies. “We hope that in the coming years we will become an anchor centre supporting training for countries in the region.” Medical innovation hub “Kazakhstan aims to become a medical innovation hub within the next five years,” said Adlet Tabarov, deputy chair of the Salidat Kairbekova National Scientific Center for Healthcare Development. With internationally accredited clinics, competitive pricing and expanding high-tech treatments such as proton therapy, Kazakhstan is positioning its healthcare sector as a regional destination for international patients. Go to accessibility shortcuts Share Read more East-West Connect How Kazakhstan plans to become Eurasia’s leading crypto hub In partnership with MDQ East-West Connect How women-led SMEs are reshaping Kazakhstan’s economy In partnership with MDQ East-West Connect Kazakhstan advances nuclear projects and research hubs for energy In partnership with MDQ Medicine Tourism Health Kazakhstan
## Article Content
By 
Botagoz Marabai
Published on
18/03/2026 - 15:00 GMT+1
Share
Share
Send
Messenger
Telegram
VK
Bluesky
Threads
Copy/paste the article video embed link below:
Copied
Kazakhstan is positioning itself as Central Asia’s medical tourism hub. The country attracted about 80,000 foreign patients last year and aims to increase that to 300,000 annually. Among the attractions is Astana’s National Research Oncology Center, which hosts the region’s only proton therapy unit.
Since 2020, the fastest growth in medical tourism to Kazakhstan has come from India and China, with patient numbers rising 40-fold and 24-fold respectively. Arrivals from Türkiye have tripled.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
According to the Ministry of Healthcare, patients now travel to Kazakhstan from around 50 countries.
The Kazakhstan Medical Tourism Association forecasts that the number of foreign patients could reach 300,000 a year. Experts say the growth will be supported by the expansion of AI diagnostics and telemedicine.
JCI-accredited clinics and treatments
Interest in Kazakhstan’s medical cluster is driven by relatively low treatment costs, Health Minister Akmaral Alnazarova said.
According to the ministry, diagnostic procedures and surgeries can cost five to ten times less than in the United States or Europe.
“All clinical protocols used in treatment are aligned with European standards. They also undergo health technology assessment, which has been implemented in Kazakhstan for more than ten years,” Alnazarova said.
Nine clinics in the country have received accreditation from Joint Commission International, widely considered the gold standard in patient safety and healthcare quality.
Several specialised institutions form the core of Kazakhstan’s medical cluster.
The National Centre for Neurosurgery performs complex operations on the brain and spinal cord. The facility also operates the Gamma Knife system, used to treat brain conditions, the only installation of its kind in the region, the minister noted.
Another flagship institution is the Cardiac Surgery Centre, a regional leader in emergency cardiac care. Heart transplants and other procedures performed there match the standards of leading international clinics, Alnazarova said.
Kazakhstan also treats young patients at the internationally accredited National Center for Maternal and Child Health, which specialises in oncohematological diseases.
Among European visitors, one of the most in-demand services is in vitro fertilisation, thanks to competitive pricing and high standards of care. Foreign patients also travel to Kazakhstan for advanced high-tech dental procedures, the minister added.
Central Asia’s first proton therapy unit
Kazakhstan is expanding specialised cancer treatment. Six radiotherapy centres and 19 endoscopy units have opened in recent years, while 17 oncology centres have been modernised.
Last year, the country introduced proton therapy, a highly precise form of radiation treatment that targets tumours while minimising damage to surrounding tissue. Kazakhstan became the first country in Central Asia to introduce the technology and the 25th worldwide.
The facility, located at the National Research Oncology Centre in Astana, can treat up to 1,000 patients annually. It uses the ProBeam 360 system, incorporating technologies developed in Sweden and the United States.
Gulnara Shakenova, who has been diagnosed with brain cancer, is among the first patients receiving treatment at the new proton therapy unit.
“Every day I come here with hope and gratitude. The procedure is completely painless. You simply lie down and feel no discomfort,” she said.
The National Research Oncology Centre is also aiming to become a regional training and research hub for International Atomic Energy Agency programmes in nuclear medicine.
“An IAEA mission visited in January to assess our infrastructure and professional capacity,” said Indira Tleulessova, Head of the Centre for Radiation Technologies.
“We hope that in the coming years we will become an anchor centre supporting training for countries in the region.”
Medical innovation hub
“Kazakhstan aims to become a medical innovation hub within the next five years,” said Adlet Tabarov, deputy chair of the Salidat Kairbekova National Scientific Center for Healthcare Development.
He noted that the country is strengthening cooperation with neighbouring states through agreements on healthcare innovation and health technology assessment.
Kazakhstan is also developing a full medical innovation cycle, linking research, preclinical testing, clinical pilots and local production.
The launch of a modern vivarium at the Nazarbayev University research cluster now allows full-scale preclinical studies to be conducted within the country.
“This reduces costs and risks for investors and makes Kazakhstan more attractive as a regional R&D hub,” said MedTech expert Seitzhan Sypabek.
He added that the focus is currentl
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
- The National Research Oncology Centre is also aiming to become a regional training and research hub for International Atomic Energy Agency programmes in nuclear medicine. “An IAEA mission visited in January to assess our infrastructure and professional capacity,” said Indira Tleulessova, Head of the Centre for Radiation Technologies. “We hope that in the coming years we will become an anchor centre supporting training for countries in the region.” Medical innovation hub “Kazakhstan aims to become a medical innovation hub within the next five years,” said Adlet Tabarov, deputy chair of the Salidat Kairbekova National Scientific Center for Healthcare Development.
- He noted that the country is strengthening cooperation with neighbouring states through agreements on healthcare innovation and health technology assessment.
- Kazakhstan is also developing a full medical innovation cycle, linking research, preclinical testing, clinical pilots and local production.
### Areas for Consideration
N/A
### Implications
- The Kazakhstan Medical Tourism Association forecasts that the number of foreign patients could reach 300,000 a year.
- Experts say the growth will be supported by the expansion of AI diagnostics and telemedicine.
- The National Research Oncology Centre is also aiming to become a regional training and research hub for International Atomic Energy Agency programmes in nuclear medicine. “An IAEA mission visited in January to assess our infrastructure and professional capacity,” said Indira Tleulessova, Head of the Centre for Radiation Technologies. “We hope that in the coming years we will become an anchor centre supporting training for countries in the region.” Medical innovation hub “Kazakhstan aims to become a medical innovation hub within the next five years,” said Adlet Tabarov, deputy chair of the Salidat Kairbekova National Scientific Center for Healthcare Development.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers kazakhstan, medical, patients topics. Notable strengths include discussion of kazakhstan. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 960.
Related Articles
See the messages Brian Hooker sent his friend after wife's disappearance in...
3 days, 12 hours ago
Breaking down Artemis II's reentry process, heat shield's importance
3 days, 12 hours ago
Tracking traffic through the Strait of Hormuz
3 days, 12 hours ago
Israel issues new evacuation orders for Beirut suburbs
3 days, 12 hours ago