- admin
- March 11, 2026
- No Comments
Blog Details
Your cardiologist has just told you that you need heart surgery. A family member mentions that someone they know had their bypass done in India for a fraction of the Malaysian cost. You start researching. The options feel overwhelming.
Going abroad for heart surgery is a significant decision. Done right, it can save your family tens of thousands of ringgit, eliminate months of waiting, and connect you with surgeons who perform hundreds of these procedures every year. Done carelessly, without asking the right questions, it can leave you vulnerable.
This checklist exists so you walk into every conversation — with a hospital, a coordinator, or a surgeon — fully prepared. These are the 10 questions every Malaysian patient should ask before committing to heart surgery abroad. We have also answered each one from the perspective of VNR Medical Service, so you know exactly what to expect if you choose to work with us.
VNR Medical Service answers yes to every one of these questions. We were built specifically so that Malaysian patients never have to navigate a foreign healthcare system alone. If you have a cardiac report and you are wondering whether surgery in India is the right path for you, the first step is simple — send us your report for a free medical review. No commitment. No pressure. Just a clear clinical opinion within 48 hours. WhatsApp us at +6011 2159 9937 or email info@vnrmedicservice.com. We reply the same day.
Question 1: Is the hospital accredited by a recognised international body?
Accreditation is the single most important quality signal for any hospital. It means an independent third-party organisation has reviewed the hospital’s facilities, protocols, infection control, surgical outcomes, and patient safety standards — and found them to meet a defined benchmark. For hospitals in India, look specifically for NABH accreditation (National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers). NABH is the Indian equivalent of Malaysia’s MSQH (Malaysian Society for Quality in Health) standard and is recognised by the International Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua). It is not a one-time certification — hospitals are audited continuously and can lose accreditation if standards drop. What to watch out for: Some hospitals display logos from obscure or unverifiable bodies. Ask the coordinator to show you the actual accreditation certificate with an expiry date and a verification link. VNR’s answer: DDMM Heart Institute holds full NABH accreditation. We are happy to share the certificate on request.Question 2: How many times has the surgeon performed this specific procedure?
General surgical experience is not the same as specific procedural volume. You want to know how many CABGs, valve replacements, or angioplasties your surgeon has personally performed — not the hospital’s total count. Research published in leading cardiothoracic journals consistently shows a clear relationship between surgeon volume and patient outcomes. High-volume cardiac surgeons have statistically lower rates of post-operative complications, re-operation, and 30-day mortality. For open-heart surgery specifically, the difference is significant. A reasonable minimum benchmark for CABG surgeons is 150 to 200 procedures per year. Ask for the surgeon’s personal annual volume, not a team or department figure. VNR’s answer: Dr. Sanjeeth Peter, Director and Chief Cardiac Surgeon at DDMM Heart Institute, has performed over 10,000 cardiac surgeries across his career. He is also the Secretary of the Indian Association of Coronary Surgeons (IACS). His personal annual volume consistently exceeds 300 open-heart procedures.Question 3: What is included in the total cost — and what is not?
This is where many patients get caught off guard. A quoted price of RM30,000 for CABG sounds straightforward until you discover it does not include the anaesthesiologist’s fee, ICU days beyond three nights, post-operative medication, or the coordinator’s fee. Always ask for a written itemised breakdown that includes:- Surgeon’s fee
- Anaesthesia fee
- ICU stay (per night, and how many nights are estimated)
- Ward stay (per night, and estimated duration)
- Pre-operative diagnostics (ECG, blood tests, echo, angiogram if needed)
- Post-operative medication for discharge
- Coordinator fees if applicable
- Caregiver accommodation if you are bringing a family member
Question 4: Can I speak directly with the surgeon before travelling?
A reputable hospital and coordinator will always facilitate a pre-travel consultation between you and the operating surgeon. This is not just a comfort measure — it is clinically important. The surgeon needs to review your case, confirm the recommended procedure, flag any additional risks specific to your health profile, and set realistic expectations for your recovery. If a coordinator tells you that you can only speak with the surgeon after you arrive at the hospital, treat that as a red flag. You should never travel overseas for major surgery without having spoken directly with the person who will operate on you. VNR’s answer: We arrange a video consultation with Dr. Peter’s team before you book anything. You can ask every question you have, in Bahasa Malaysia via our liaison, before making any commitment.Question 5: What happens if there is a complication after surgery?
This is the question most patients are afraid to ask because they do not want to think about worst-case scenarios. Ask it anyway. How a hospital answers this question tells you a great deal about their honesty and their capability. Specifically ask:- Does the hospital have a dedicated cardiac ICU with 24-hour intensivist cover?
- What is the protocol if I need emergency re-intervention after surgery?
- What happens if my discharge is delayed by 5 or 10 days due to a slow recovery?
- Who do I contact if I develop symptoms after returning to Malaysia?
Question 6: Is there someone who speaks my language throughout the process?
For Malaysian patients, this goes beyond convenience — it is a patient safety issue. Medical miscommunication is one of the leading causes of adverse events in healthcare settings. When you are under stress, unwell, or recovering from major surgery, you need to be able to communicate clearly and understand exactly what you are being told. Ask specifically: who will translate during ward rounds, during the surgical consent process, and during discharge briefings? Is this person a trained medical interpreter or a general coordinator? Are they physically present or available only by phone? VNR’s answer: A dedicated Bahasa Malaysia-speaking VNR liaison accompanies every patient throughout their hospital stay — attending ward rounds, translating every clinical discussion, and ensuring the patient and family fully understand each decision before it is made. This is not an optional add-on. It is standard for every VNR patient.Question 7: What does the coordinator actually do — and what do they not do?
The quality of medical tourism coordinators varies enormously. Some are genuine end-to-end support services. Others are little more than booking agents who disappear after your flight lands. Understanding exactly what your coordinator covers before you travel prevents very unpleasant surprises. Ask for a written scope of services covering: airport pickup, hospital liaison, caregiver accommodation, daily check-ins during recovery, fit-to-fly clearance, and post-return follow-up. If any of these are described as optional extras with additional fees, negotiate before you travel, not after. Also ask: what is the coordinator’s fee structure? Is it a flat fee included in the package, or is it a commission paid by the hospital? A coordinator paid by commission has an incentive to send you to the hospital that pays them the most — not necessarily the one best suited to your condition. VNR’s answer: VNR’s full scope of services is documented and shared with every patient before they commit. We cover VIP airport transport, hospital liaison, caregiver accommodation, daily recovery visits, fit-to-fly coordination, and 30-day and 90-day follow-up after returning to Malaysia. We do not receive hospital commissions.Question 8: Will my Malaysian insurance cover any part of this?
Many Malaysian patients assume their health insurance policy does not cover overseas treatment and do not check. Some are right. But a significant number of Malaysian private health insurance policies do provide partial or full coverage for medically necessary procedures performed abroad — particularly when the procedure is not available in Malaysia within a reasonable timeframe. Contact your insurance provider directly before you travel and ask specifically:- Does my policy cover medically necessary cardiac surgery performed outside Malaysia?
- What documentation do I need from the hospital for the claim?
- Is there a cap on overseas medical claims?
- Do I need pre-authorisation before the procedure?
Question 9: What are the travel requirements and visa process for India?
Malaysian patients travelling to India for medical treatment require a Medical e-Visa, which is separate from the standard tourist e-Visa. It allows a stay of up to 60 days and can be extended once in-country if medically necessary. The application is completed online at the Indian e-Visa portal and is typically approved within 3 to 5 business days. You will need a letter of invitation from the treating hospital to support your Medical e-Visa application. Caregiver companions travelling with you require their own separate Medical e-Visa as attendants — this is a different visa category from the patient’s visa. Also confirm the nearest airport to the hospital. DDMM Heart Institute in Nadiad, Gujarat is approximately 45 minutes from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in Ahmedabad. AirAsia and Malaysia Airlines operate direct and one-stop connections from Kuala Lumpur to Ahmedabad. VNR’s answer: We provide the hospital invitation letter required for your Medical e-Visa application and guide you through the online application process. We also arrange Medical e-Visas for caregiver companions. VNR transport picks you up directly from Ahmedabad airport on arrival.Question 10: What is the plan for my care after I return to Malaysia?
Post-operative cardiac care does not end when you board the flight home. The first 90 days after major heart surgery are a critical period. Medication adherence, wound monitoring, activity restrictions, and follow-up echocardiograms are all part of a safe recovery. Your Malaysian cardiologist needs to have a complete clinical handover from the operating team in India. Ask your coordinator: what documentation will I receive at discharge? Will it be in English? Will it include the operative report, post-operative medication list, activity restrictions, and instructions for my Malaysian cardiologist? Is there a way to contact the Indian surgical team directly if my Malaysian doctor has a clinical question? The National Heart Association of Malaysia (NHAM) recommends that post-CABG patients have a cardiology review within 4 to 6 weeks of surgery and again at 3 months. Make sure this is planned before you travel. VNR’s answer: Every VNR patient receives a complete discharge pack in English covering the operative report, post-operative medications, wound care instructions, activity guidelines, and a clinical summary for their Malaysian cardiologist. VNR remains contactable for the full 30-day and 90-day follow-up period and can facilitate direct communication between your Malaysian cardiologist and Dr. Peter’s team if clinical questions arise.Your Pre-Travel Checklist Summary
| # | Question | What to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Is the hospital accredited? | NABH certificate with valid expiry date |
| 2 | What is the surgeon’s personal procedure volume? | 150+ procedures per year minimum for CABG |
| 3 | Is the cost estimate itemised and complete? | Written breakdown covering all fees |
| 4 | Can I speak with the surgeon before travelling? | Video consultation before any commitment |
| 5 | What is the complication protocol? | 24/7 cardiac ICU, emergency re-intervention capability |
| 6 | Is there a language interpreter throughout? | Physically present, not just available by phone |
| 7 | What does the coordinator actually cover? | Written scope from airport to post-return follow-up |
| 8 | Does my insurance cover any part of this? | Check before travelling, not after |
| 9 | What are the visa and travel logistics? | Medical e-Visa, correct airport, caregiver visa |
| 10 | What is the post-return care plan? | Full English discharge pack, 90-day follow-up |
VNR Medical Service answers yes to every one of these questions. We were built specifically so that Malaysian patients never have to navigate a foreign healthcare system alone. If you have a cardiac report and you are wondering whether surgery in India is the right path for you, the first step is simple — send us your report for a free medical review. No commitment. No pressure. Just a clear clinical opinion within 48 hours. WhatsApp us at +6011 2159 9937 or email info@vnrmedicservice.com. We reply the same day.
